Publications by authors named "Jarosz H"

Ninety one patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) were screened for sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). Case fatality, rate of recurrence of cerebrovascular events, and functional outcome were analyzed during a 2-year follow-up. The patients were stratified into groups: without (AH < or =5) and with SDB (AHI >5).

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The effects of therapy with cholinesterase inhibitors (ChE-I) on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) disturbances were investigated by means of single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). The changes in rCBF were compared with the results of the medical examination and neuropsychological tests. The sample consisted of 41 patients with the Alzheimer's dementia (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD).

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Parathyroid autotransplantation was first described in 1907 by Halsted. However, this simple and effective method of preserving parathyroid function has been used with increasing frequency only during the past 25 years. Beginning in the late 1960s, our group has transplanted normal parathyroid tissue into the ipsilateral sternocleidomastoid muscle whenever these glands could not be preserved in situ with adequate blood supply.

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In contrast to a few follicles arranged in a wedge-shaped segment at the periphery of a lymph node, a significant amount of thyroid tissue in a cervical lymph node is considered evidence of metastatic thyroid carcinoma. In a consecutive series of 243 patients with papillary carcinomas, 52 presented with lateral cervical masses that proved to be lymph nodes with metastatic thyroid carcinoma, in the absence of readily palpable thyroid nodularity. The metastatic disease was demonstrated by excisional biopsy in 40 patients and fine needle aspiration cytology in 12 patients.

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Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is increasing in incidence and detection, primarily because of the aging of our population and the widespread use of automated serum calcium determination. As a result, a substantial number of "early" cases or "biochemical" PHPT are being detected. The indications for parathyroidectomy in such early cases of PHPT are currently under debate, primarily because of economic issues.

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Thyroid and parathyroid disease after head and neck irradiation in infancy and childhood is well known. Patients irradiated for facial acne were older and received a comparatively lower dose of radiation. These mitigating factors suggest a decreased incidence of thyroid and parathyroid disease in these patients.

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The interpretation of aspiration cytologic smears that contain a predominance of follicular components often presents a dilemma to the clinician who is treating a patient who has a dominant thyroid nodule, especially when thyroid-stimulating hormone suppression does not produce any significant involution of the dominant nodule. We reviewed a consecutive series of 555 fine-needle aspiration cytologic examinations of dominant thyroid nodules. All specimens that contained colloid or follicular cells mixed with lymphocytes or Hürthle cells were excluded from this review.

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Although parathyroid autotransplantation during the course of thyroidectomy was first described by Halsted in 1907, it is only during the past 20 years that this simple and effective method of preserving parathyroid function is being used by an increasing number of surgeons. Our group has autotransplanted normal parathyroids since 1965, whenever these glands could not be preserved in situ with adequate blood supply. With increasing experience, we find it much simpler to autotransplant parathyroid glands attached to the thyroid, than to dissect their precarious blood supply, hoping they will survive postoperative edema and fibrosis.

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Primary hyperparathyroidism is commonly associated with Hashimoto's thyroiditis. The raised TSH levels might induce hyperparathyroidism, as suggested by some experimental data. It might also explain the development of hyperparathyroidism after neck irradiation and lithium therapy.

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In a consecutive series of 234 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma of follicular cell origin (Hürthle cell tumors excluded), a radioactive iodine (131I) scan was obtained 3 to 6 months after thyroidectomy and 4 weeks after cessation of thyroid hormone treatments, only if extrathyroidal tumor extension or nodal or distant metastases were present. Twenty-one patients (9%) with 131I uptake of 3% or more (group 1) were treated with 150 to 200 mCi of 131I. Forty-four patients (19%) with less than 3% uptake (group 2) and 169 patients (72%) without evidence of metastases or extrathyroidal spread (group 3) were treated only with thyroid hormone.

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Differentiated carcinoma of the thyroid gland is regarded as an indolent disease. However, this notion is dispelled when the population is stratified according to age, gross and microscopic tumoral characteristics and according to the occurrence of local and distant metastases in the early postoperative period. The adverse effect of local and distant recurrences on survival time has been emphasized in multiple series from the United States and Europe.

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Of 522 patients with hyperparathyroidism operated on from 1973 to 1987 at our institution, there were seven (1.3%), each with an ectopic, hyperfunctioning mediastinal parathyroid adenoma, who required median sternotomy. In three of these seven patients, the tumor was located in the aorticopulmonary window.

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Over a period of 25 years (1961-1986), 30 consecutive patients were operated upon for solitary "HOT" nodules. The autonomy of these nodules was substantiated by cytomel nonsuppressibility on 131I or 123I scanning, or TSH stimulated enhancement of the remaining suppressed thyroid tissue (n = 24); or as a solitary toxic hot nodule with suppression of the remaining thyroid tissue (n = 6). Seventeen of these patients were euthyroid and 13 were thyrotoxic and required preoperative preparation with antithyroid medication.

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Over a period of 32 years from 1954 to 1986, 65 patients under the age of 21 years, 52 girls and 13 boys, were operated for nodular thyroids: the overall incidence of carcinoma was 37 per cent. It was 46 per cent in those patients presenting with a solitary nodule. Among the 24 patients with a malignancy, the carcinoma was of the papillary variety in 63 per cent, follicular in 25 per cent and medullary in 12 per cent.

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The incidence of thyroid carcinoma in Hashimoto's thyroiditis has been a widely debated issue. Previous authors have reported on this topic by analyzing series of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis or patients with thyroid carcinoma, but not both of those populations in the same series. The population consists of a consecutive series of 800 patients operated on for thyroid nodules not associated with a radiation history.

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Iatrogenic vocal cord paralysis is a well-publicized complication of thyroid and parathyroid operations. Less appreciated is the improvement of vocal cord function after resection of a thyroid or parathyroid tumor. Over the last 22 years, 14 patients presented with vocal cord paresis in the presence of thyroid or parathyroid tumors.

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The merit of the preoperative localization of parathyroid tumors with thallium-technetium subtraction imaging is a subject of current debate in the treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism. Eighty patients with hyperparathyroidism underwent preoperative subtraction scintigraphy with 201Tl Cl and 99mTcO4; scan results were correlated with the operative identification and histopathology of the resected parathyroid tissue. The true-positive, false-positive and false-negative rates of these scans were compared between patients with tumors in normal and ectopic anatomic locations and between patients undergoing an initial and reoperative neck exploration.

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The question of thyroid neoplasia following high-dose radiation treatment to the neck and mediastinum for malignant neoplasms such as Hodgkin's lymphoma in children and young adults has been raised recently. Five patients, 19 to 39 years old, were operated on for thyroid neoplasms that developed following cervical and mediastinal radiation therapy for Hodgkin's lymphoma. Three patients had papillary carcinomas and two had follicular adenomas.

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The incidence of carcinoma in patients with multinodular goiters has been reported to be considerably lower than in patients with a single cold nodule. However, the definition of a "single cold nodule" is highly subjective and has therefore been modified by qualifiers such as "clinically solitary" or "clinically dominant." In this retrospective study, we find no significant difference in the incidence of carcinoma in patients with multinodular goiters compared with patients with a solitary cold nodule confirmed by operation and histopathologic examination.

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Rat, hamster, and rabbit renal cortical lymphatics were examined by light and electron microscopy. Rat and hamster kidneys possessed both intra- and interlobular lymphatics that were structurally similar at the light microscopic level. Ultrastructural examination of the hamster lymphatic endothelium, however, revealed an unusual arrangement of cytoplasmic extensions not seen in the other two species.

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The charge distribution on the luminal and abluminal aspects of fixed and living lymphatic endothelium was examined with particular emphasis on the endocytotic vesicular system and interendothelial junctions. Native ferritin (NF; pl = 4.5), when administered abluminally to perfused lymphatics, entered endocytotic vesicles and abluminal and luminal caveolae; NF was also found in intercellular channels, in contrast, NF when applied luminally was largely excluded from both luminal caveolae and intercellular channels.

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The purpose of the work was to develop an in vitro model for the study of lymphatic endothelium and to determine, using this model, whether or not a cytoplasmic process may be involved in transendothelial transport. Segments of canine renal hilar lymphatics were dissected clean, cannulated at both ends, and transferred to a perfusion chamber for measurement of transendothelial protein transport and for ultrastructural tracer studies. The segments were subsequently processed for light and electron microscopy.

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The relationship between renin activity in renal venous plasma and in renal interstitial fluid, as reflected in the hilar lymph, was observed. Control measurements in 28 dogs demonstrated that renin levels in the hilar lymph were 3.5 +/-- (SEM) 0.

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Volume expansion of 5-10% body weight in dogs was achieved by infusion of 0.9%, 1.2% or 0.

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Water diuresis was induced in dogs, under chloralose anesthesia, by hypotonic volume expansion of 5 to 10% body weight. The average diuretic response was 12.5 ml/hr/kg body weight with a urine osmolality of 175 mOsm/L.

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