Publications by authors named "Katarina Nadova"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examined CT/MRI scans of 127 subjects (63 with cervical cancer and 64 with endometrial cancer) to compare rates of radiation-related fractures following different treatments.
  • Despite differences in treatment doses and patient characteristics like age and BMI, the fracture rates were similar: 28.6% for cervical cancer patients and 26.6% for endometrial cancer patients.
  • Lower bone density was a significant factor, as older cervical cancer patients had lower bone densities, and while endometrial cancer patients showed no age difference, they also had lower bone densities and BMIs, with overall fracture risk linked mainly to osteoporosis rather than BMI.
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Surgical treatment is preferred therapy of early-stage cervical carcinoma. In the risk of cancer recurrence surgery is often followed by adjuvant radiotherapy. In our retrospective study we aimed at identifying late (≥6 months) and very late (≥5 years) radiation adverse effects on imaging scans as CT, PET/CT and MRI in patients who underwent successful treatment for cervical carcinoma by radical surgery combined with radiotherapy ± chemotherapy.

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Background: Radical combined radiotherapy (RT) is a standard treatment for advanced cervical cancer. The aim of our study was to identify morphological late (≥6 months) and very late (≥5 years) radiation-related comorbidities on computed tomography (CT), positron emission tomography/computerized tomography (PET/CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans in young females who survived ≥5 years since RT and were considered as successfully treated. Secondly, we studied a rate of clinically silent radiation-related toxicities apparent on imaging scans that might influenced on future well-being of survived females.

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Vaccine derived poliovirus (VDPV) type 2 strains strongly divergent from the corresponding vaccine strain, Sabin 2, were repeatedly isolated from sewage in Slovakia over a period of 22 months in 2003-2005. Cell cultures of stool specimens from known immune deficient patients and from an identified putative source population of 500 people failed to identify the potential excretor(s) of the virus. The occurrence of VDPV in sewage stopped without any intervention.

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