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This book is intended as a reference manual that will provide the
busy clinician with up-to-date information on the diagnosis and
treatment of uncommon and rare gynecological cancers. While
standard textbooks briefly cover these tumors, this is intended as
a more comprehensive yet easy-to-use guide. After opening chapters
on epidemiology, pathology, and diagnostic imaging, the full range
of infrequently encountered gynecological cancers (ovarian,
uterine, cervical, vaginal, and vulval) is presented and discussed
with the aid of high-quality illustrations. In each case, detailed
attention is paid to both differential diagnosis and current
treatment options. The book has been written by an international
panel of experts and is the first to gather all the uncommon and
rare gynecological cancers together within one volume.
This book is intended as a reference manual that will provide the
busy clinician with up-to-date information on the diagnosis and
treatment of uncommon and rare gynecological cancers. While
standard textbooks briefly cover these tumors, this is intended as
a more comprehensive yet easy-to-use guide. After opening chapters
on epidemiology, pathology, and diagnostic imaging, the full range
of infrequently encountered gynecological cancers (ovarian,
uterine, cervical, vaginal, and vulval) is presented and discussed
with the aid of high-quality illustrations. In each case, detailed
attention is paid to both differential diagnosis and current
treatment options. The book has been written by an international
panel of experts and is the first to gather all the uncommon and
rare gynecological cancers together within one volume.
Most of us remember the seventh of September 1940 as the day the
London docks were bombed and devastated by fire. I remember it as
the day I was called up. But the police car that collected me took
me to Wormwood Scrubs Prison . . . Major Ronnie Reed never spoke
about what he did in the Second World War. He was only 23 when it
broke out; an amateur radio enthusiast who was working as a
maintenance engineer for the BBC. And yet, despite minimal money
and qualifications, he became one of the men behind some of the
most remarkable spy stories of all time. Recruited in the dead of
night from his Anderson shelter, Ronnie became a case officer for
double agents, including Eddie Chapman, known then as Agent Zigzag.
The passport photo of The Man Who Never Was, was a photo of Ronnie
Reed. For ten years after the Second World War, he headed the
anti-Russian department of MI5, dealing with notorious spies such
as Philby, Burgess and Maclean. In 1994, shortly before Ronnie's
death, he revealed the truth of his remarkable past to his son,
Nicholas. In Spy Runner he reveals his father's fascinating story
with a collection of recently released reports and photos from The
National Archives, and intimate family snaps.
A history of Crystal Palace and the Norwoods
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