[Endocrine-active tumors of the ovary]

Standard

[Endocrine-active tumors of the ovary]. / Stegner, H-E; Löning, Thomas.

In: PATHOLOGE, Vol. 24, No. 4, 4, 2003, p. 314-322.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Stegner, H-E & Löning, T 2003, '[Endocrine-active tumors of the ovary]', PATHOLOGE, vol. 24, no. 4, 4, pp. 314-322. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14513280?dopt=Citation>

APA

Vancouver

Stegner H-E, Löning T. [Endocrine-active tumors of the ovary]. PATHOLOGE. 2003;24(4):314-322. 4.

Bibtex

@article{87b9b8ef083c435f9e66a8169198bdab,
title = "[Endocrine-active tumors of the ovary]",
abstract = "Most hormonally active ovarian tumors belong to the category of tumors of the gonadal stroma. These account for less than 5% of all ovarian tumors. About two-thirds of tumors of the gonadal stroma produce steroid hormones. The pathologic secretion of estrogenic or androgenic hormones leads to specific effects on the hormone-sensitive target organs. The clinical manifestations depend on both the amount of hormones secreted and the age of the patient. Tumors of the gonadal stroma are potentially malignant, ranging between noninvasive (borderline) tumors and invasive epithelial tumors of the ovary. Besides the specifically steroid hormone-producing tumors, a wide variety of ovarian tumors other than those in the stroma of the ovary and steroid cell tumors may be hormonally active as the result of an increase in and/or stimulation of nonneoplastic ovarian stromal cells within or adjacent to the tumor.",
author = "H-E Stegner and Thomas L{\"o}ning",
year = "2003",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "24",
pages = "314--322",
journal = "PATHOLOGE",
issn = "0172-8113",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - [Endocrine-active tumors of the ovary]

AU - Stegner, H-E

AU - Löning, Thomas

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Most hormonally active ovarian tumors belong to the category of tumors of the gonadal stroma. These account for less than 5% of all ovarian tumors. About two-thirds of tumors of the gonadal stroma produce steroid hormones. The pathologic secretion of estrogenic or androgenic hormones leads to specific effects on the hormone-sensitive target organs. The clinical manifestations depend on both the amount of hormones secreted and the age of the patient. Tumors of the gonadal stroma are potentially malignant, ranging between noninvasive (borderline) tumors and invasive epithelial tumors of the ovary. Besides the specifically steroid hormone-producing tumors, a wide variety of ovarian tumors other than those in the stroma of the ovary and steroid cell tumors may be hormonally active as the result of an increase in and/or stimulation of nonneoplastic ovarian stromal cells within or adjacent to the tumor.

AB - Most hormonally active ovarian tumors belong to the category of tumors of the gonadal stroma. These account for less than 5% of all ovarian tumors. About two-thirds of tumors of the gonadal stroma produce steroid hormones. The pathologic secretion of estrogenic or androgenic hormones leads to specific effects on the hormone-sensitive target organs. The clinical manifestations depend on both the amount of hormones secreted and the age of the patient. Tumors of the gonadal stroma are potentially malignant, ranging between noninvasive (borderline) tumors and invasive epithelial tumors of the ovary. Besides the specifically steroid hormone-producing tumors, a wide variety of ovarian tumors other than those in the stroma of the ovary and steroid cell tumors may be hormonally active as the result of an increase in and/or stimulation of nonneoplastic ovarian stromal cells within or adjacent to the tumor.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 24

SP - 314

EP - 322

JO - PATHOLOGE

JF - PATHOLOGE

SN - 0172-8113

IS - 4

M1 - 4

ER -