Prenatal diagnosis of limb-reduction defects due to maternal cocaine use

[1]  K. Jones Developmental pathogenesis of defects associated with prenatal cocaine exposure: fetal vascular disruption. , 1991, Clinics in perinatology.

[2]  R. Lefering,et al.  Conventional Versus laparoscopic cholecystectomy and the randomized controlled trial , 1991, The British journal of surgery.

[3]  W. P. Ledet,et al.  Ambulatory cholecystectomy without disability. , 1990, Archives of surgery.

[4]  C. Lunan,et al.  Normal development after exposure to mifepristone in early pregnancy , 1990, The Lancet.

[5]  P. Brown-Woodman,et al.  Cocaine as a cause of congenital malformations of vascular origin: experimental evidence in the rat. , 1990, Teratology.

[6]  H. Hoyme,et al.  Prenatal cocaine exposure and fetal vascular disruption. , 1990, Pediatrics.

[7]  B. B. Little,et al.  Maternal and fetal effects of heroin addiction during pregnancy. , 1990, The Journal of reproductive medicine.

[8]  K McPherson,et al.  Mortality and reoperation after open and transurethral resection of the prostate for benign prostatic hyperplasia. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  R. Henrion RU 486 abortions , 1989, Nature.

[10]  P. Coles French government approves abortion pill for commercial use , 1988, Nature.

[11]  J. R. Merrill Minimal trauma cholecystectomy (a "no-touch" procedure in a "well"). , 1988, The American surgeon.

[12]  J. B. Ganey,et al.  Cholecystectomy: clinical experience with a large series. , 1986, American journal of surgery.

[13]  G. Moss Discharge within 24 hours of elective cholecystectomy. The first 100 patients. , 1986, Archives of surgery.