Publications by authors named "J M Aronchick"

We conducted a medical screening for beryllium disease of 577 former workers from a beryllium processing facility. The screening included a medical and work history questionnaire, a chest radiograph, and blood lymphocyte proliferation testing for beryllium. A task exposure and a job exposure matrix were constructed to examine the association between exposure to beryllium and the development of beryllium disease.

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Objective: The purpose of this pilot project was to train medical students in sonography.

Methods: Thirty-three medical students participated in a pilot sonography course, which included exposure to ultrasound physics, knobology of a compact ultrasound scanner, training in scanning and anatomy of the aorta and right kidney, and reading assignments in these areas. Pretraining and posttraining examinations were given in these areas to analyze the degree of knowledge gained by these methods.

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Study Objective: To evaluate the accuracy of positron emission tomography (PET) in determining the presence of malignancy in patients presenting with new lung findings, either as an incidental finding or after treatment of a primary carcinoma.

Design: A retrospective review of the PET database of our hospital from April 29, 1997, to March 20, 1999, identified 196 patients referred for the evaluation of new lung findings, either as an incidental finding or following definitive treatment of a primary carcinoma. The diagnosis of either malignancy or a benign condition was established in 71 patients.

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This study was undertaken to evaluate the efficacy of high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) in predicting the development of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) in lung transplant recipients. Fifty lung transplant patients who were clinically stable and without evidence of BOS were evaluated for the presence of four HRCT features reported to be associated with bronchiolitis obliterans: mosaic attenuation on inspiratory CT (mosaic perfusion), mosaic attenuation on expiratory CT (air trapping), bronchiectasis, and tree-in-bud opacities. CT exams were part of an annual surveillance process with the hope of predicting subsequent development of BOS.

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