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Träfflista för sökning "hsv:(MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP) hsv:(Klinisk medicin) hsv:(Kirurgi) srt2:(1990-1999)"

Search: hsv:(MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP) hsv:(Klinisk medicin) hsv:(Kirurgi) > (1990-1999)

  • Result 11-20 of 475
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11.
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13.
  • Ohlsson, Bodil, et al. (author)
  • Time-course of the pancreatic changes following long-term stimulation or inhibition of the CCK-A receptor
  • 1995
  • In: International Journal of Pancreatology. - 0169-4197. ; 18:1, s. 59-66
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Cholecystokinin (CCK) reportedly induces both hyperplastic and hypertrophic changes in the pancreas. Blockade of the CCK receptor results in decreased pancreatic secretion and atrophy. The aim of this study was to evaluate the time-course of the effects of stimulation and inhibition of the CCK-A receptor in the rat exocrine pancreas. Male rats had infusion of sulfated CCK-8, the CCK-A receptor antagonist devazepide, or sodium chloride by osmotic minipumps. After 36 h, 3, 7, or 28 d the rats had ip injections of thymidine, and 1 h later they were sacrificed. The pancreas was excised, weighed, and its content of protein, DNA, water, and enzymes was analyzed. Histologic samples were prepared for autoradiography. Pancreatic weight, protein, and DNA were increased at 36 h after the start of CCK infusion and throughout the study period. CCK stimulation also increased the content of trypsin at days 3 and 28. The labeling index of pancreatic acinar cells was increased at 36 h. Blockade of endogenous CCK by the receptor antagonist devazepide led to decreased pancreatic weight from the third day of infusion, whereas the protein content was decreased from the seventh day. At day 28, the DNA content was decreased by devazepide. However, the labeling index of acinar cells decreased transiently already at 36 h. Neither CCK nor devazepide caused any changes of protein content:DNA content ratio during the study. Continuous infusion of CCK caused pancreatic hyperplasia already after 36 h. Stimulation up to 28 d did not cause any further effects. The adverse changes found after blockade of the CCK-A receptor showed much of the same time-course.
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14.
  • Tisell, Lars-Eric, 1931, et al. (author)
  • Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy in medullary thyroid carcinoma.
  • 1997
  • In: The British journal of surgery. - 0007-1323. ; 84:4, s. 543-7
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • 111In-radiolabelled (DTPA-D-Phe1)-octreotide scintigraphy can be used to localize neuroendocrine tumours expressing somatostatin receptors (SSTRs). The aim of this paper was to analyse the importance of tumour volume and growth for the visualization by SSTR scintigraphy of metastases from medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC).
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15.
  • Jönsson, Peter, et al. (author)
  • Chest wall sarcoma: outcome in 22 patients after resection requiring thoracic cage reconstruction.
  • 1998
  • In: Sarcoma. - : Hindawi Limited. - 1357-714X .- 1369-1643. ; 2:3-4, s. 143-147
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Purpose. To evaluate the outcome after resection of malignant chest wall sarcoma, requiring reconstruction of the chest wall.Subjects. Twenty-two patients, 15 with primary tumours, were operated on in our institution between 1983 and 1996. Four patients underwent surgery after a previous intralesional or marginal excision and three patients because of a local recurrence.Methods. The tumour was resected 'en bloc', including skin, muscle and thoracic skeleton. When necessary, adjacent organs invaded by the tumour, such as lung, pericardium and diaphragm, were also removed to obtain a wide margin. Reconstruction of the chest wall was performed with Marlex mesh (n=9), methylmethacrylate cement (n=2) or a Marlex methylmethacrylate 'sandwich' (n=11).Results. The median tumour size was 9.5 (2-20) cm. The most common type of tumour was chondrosarcoma (12 cases). No patient died in hospital. Five patients required reoperation because of complications, two patients because of loosening of the acrylate prosthesis, two because of necrosis of soft tissue coverage and one was reoperated because of bleeding. Four patients died of generalized tumour disease between 5 and 77 months after surgery and one patient died of a local recurrence 32 months after the primary operation. Seventeen patients are alive, with a median follow-up of 36 (4-162) months. Microscopic radicality (negative margin) was achieved in 17 patients but 5 of these had local recurrences. Two of five patients with positive margins had a local recurrence of the tumour. Of the seven patients with local recurrences, two also developed metastases.Discussion. Large chest wall sarcomas can be successfully resected and the chest wall reconstructed with low morbidity and mortality.
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16.
  • Hansen, F, et al. (author)
  • Non-invasive measurement of pulsatile vessel diameter change and elastic properties in human arteries: a methodological study
  • 1993
  • In: Clinical Physiology. - 1365-2281. ; 13:6, s. 631-643
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • A recently developed ultrasound phase-locked echo-tracking system makes it possible to measure non-invasive pulsatile vessel diameter changes, and, in combination with blood-pressure measurement, to calculate pressure strain elastic modulus (Ep) and stiffness (beta). The reproducibility in measurements of pulsatile diameter changes with this system was evaluated. Also the precision of indirect blood-pressure measurements, as compared to the simultaneously measured intra-arterial blood pressure was tested. The resulting reproducibility in pressure strain elastic modulus (Ep) and stiffness (beta) was evaluated. Intra-observer variabilities in measuring pulsatile diameter changes were 16% for the abdominal aorta, 10% for the common carotid artery, and 15% for the common femoral artery, respectively. Intra-observer variabilities for Ep and beta were 21% for both in the abdominal aorta, 17% for both in the common carotid artery, and 18% for both in the common femoral artery, respectively. There were only small differences in indirect and direct measurement of systolic blood pressure, whereas indirect blood pressure measurement systematically overestimated the diastolic blood pressure, on average by 20%. The variabilities in indirect blood pressure measurements were 2% for the systolic and 3% for the diastolic blood pressure, respectively. Inter-observer variability in the investigation of the common carotid artery was 10% for the pulsatile diameter changes, and 21% and 23% for Ep and beta, respectively. Thus, the echo-tracking system represents a reliable system for estimation of pressure strain elastic modulus and stiffness. However, Ep and beta are systematically underestimated by 25-30%, when used in combination with indirect blood pressure measurements.
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17.
  • Karlsson, M K, et al. (author)
  • Remodeling of the spinal canal deformed by trauma
  • 1997
  • In: Journal of Spinal Disorders. - 0895-0385. ; 10:2, s. 157-161
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Computed tomography (CT) examinations and functional scores were evaluated in 28 patients with thoracolumbar fractures with intraspinal fragments, of whom 20 underwent operation. The cross-sectional area and the sagittal and frontal diameters of the spinal canal were measured after the injury, postoperatively, and at follow-up (mean, 6 years). The operative reduction significantly increased both diameter and area of the spinal canal. During follow-up, a further significant increase of the sagittal diameter and the area was noted, in both surgically and conservatively treated patients. There was no difference in remodeling between the groups. Six patients in the surgically treated group had neurologic deficits at admission, five had improved, and one remained unchanged at follow-up. The presence or absence of intraspinal fragments should not influence the treatment strategy per se in cases without neurologic signs.
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19.
  • Ahlman, Håkan, 1947, et al. (author)
  • Somatostatin receptors on neuroendocrine tumors--a way to intraoperative diagnosis and localization.
  • 1994
  • In: The Yale journal of biology and medicine. - 0044-0086. ; 67:3-4, s. 215-21
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Intraoperative radionuclide detection using 111In-DTPA-D-Phe1-octreotide was evaluated in five patients with midgut carcinoids and in three patients with recurrent medullary thyroid carcinoma. Three different time intervals (24, 48 and 120 hr) from injection of the radiopharmaceutical to surgery were used. At surgery, suspect tumors were measured by probe in situ and ex vivo after excision. All tissue specimens and blood samples withdrawn during surgery were measured for 111In activity, and tissue/blood activity concentration ratios were calculated. In situ measurements were valuable especially in neck surgery, where the probe was helpful not only in localization of tumors but also in the control of tumor clearance. Ex vivo measurements were helpful in diagnosing tumor tissue. All five patients with midgut carcinoids were somatostatin receptor-positive, while only three out of seven patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma were receptor-positive. The tissue/blood activity concentration ratios and probe measurement ratios were in general higher in patients with midgut carcinoid than in patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma. Of particular interest were the high tissue/blood concentration ratios in all receptor-positive patients at all time intervals studied. This fact suggests a potential role for radiolabelled octreotide in radiotherapy of these tumor types.
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  • Result 11-20 of 475
Type of publication
journal article (392)
doctoral thesis (50)
conference paper (11)
book chapter (9)
reports (8)
other publication (2)
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research review (2)
book (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (393)
other academic/artistic (82)
Author/Editor
Steen, Stig (48)
Wängberg, Bo, 1953 (39)
Ahlman, Håkan, 1947 (38)
Nilsson, Ola, 1957 (29)
Sjöberg, Trygve (26)
Breimer, Michael, 19 ... (22)
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Ljungqvist, Olle, 19 ... (20)
Lundälv, Jörgen, 196 ... (18)
Tarnow, Peter, 1963 (16)
Kaigle Holm, Allison ... (15)
Ivancev, Krassi (14)
Rasmussen, I (14)
Ingemansson, Richard (13)
Lindblad, Bengt (13)
Tisell, Lars-Eric, 1 ... (11)
Lexell, Jan (11)
Haglund, U (11)
Forssell-Aronsson, E ... (10)
Gerdin, Bengt, 1947- (10)
Rydberg, Lennart, 19 ... (10)
Bergqvist, D (9)
Fjälling, M (9)
Bergenfelz, A (9)
Jönsson, Anders, 195 ... (9)
Brunkwall, J (9)
Sonesson, Björn (8)
Mölne, Johan, 1958 (8)
Malina, Martin (8)
Ohlsson, Bodil (8)
Risberg, B (8)
Thorell, Anders (8)
Axelson, Jan (8)
Hansson, Tommy H., 1 ... (8)
Svensson, Henry (8)
Brorson, Håkan (8)
Svalander, Christian ... (8)
Hultén, Leif, 1931 (8)
Dahlström, A (8)
Kimblad, Per Ola (7)
Koul, Bansi (7)
Ihse, Ingemar (7)
Holm, Sten, 1948 (7)
Ekberg, Olle (6)
Strigård, Karin (6)
Granérus, G (6)
Modlin, I M (6)
Besjakov, Jack (6)
Becker, Magnus (6)
Mangell, Peter (6)
Länne, T (6)
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University
Lund University (234)
University of Gothenburg (136)
Uppsala University (59)
Örebro University (24)
Umeå University (22)
Karolinska Institutet (18)
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Luleå University of Technology (10)
Chalmers University of Technology (4)
Linköping University (3)
Linnaeus University (3)
Halmstad University (1)
Mälardalen University (1)
University of Borås (1)
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Language
English (426)
Swedish (43)
Italian (2)
Undefined language (2)
Danish (1)
Finnish (1)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (475)
Social Sciences (13)
Engineering and Technology (4)
Natural sciences (2)

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