Publications by authors named "S J Wertheim"

This article traces the rise of humanitarian interventionist ideas in the US from 1991 to 2003. Until 1997, humanitarian intervention was a relatively limited affair, conceived ad hoc more than systematically, prioritized below multilateralism, aiming to relieve suffering without transforming foreign polities. For this reason, US leaders and citizens scarcely contemplated armed intervention in the Rwandan genocide of 1994: the US 'duty to stop genocide' was a norm still under development.

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We report the successful treatment of a patient with recurrent malignant glioma with adoptive cellular immunotherapy. The patient is a young adult with recurrent progressive disease refractory to aggressive multi-modality therapy including repetitive surgical resection, radiation, radiosurgery and chemotherapy. He received multiple courses of local administration of autologous lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in combination with a low dose of interleukin-2 (IL-2) through an Ommaya reservoir-catheter system.

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Despite the progress in neurosurgery and radiotherapy, almost all patients treated with malignant gliomas develop recurrent tumors and die of their disease. Eighty-eight patients (median age 56 years) with recurrent glioblastoma (median tumor volume 32.7 cm3) were treated with noninvasive fractionated stereotactic radiosurgery and concurrent paclitaxel used as a sensitizer.

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Purpose/objectives: To determine the effect of administering 1.6 ml (480 mcg) of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) in one subcutaneous injection or two injections of 0.8 ml each.

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Background: Single-fraction radiosurgery of acoustic neuromas less than 3 cm in diameter is remarkable for high control but not infrequent incidence of facial and trigeminal neuropathy. Larger tumors treated surgically often result in deafness and facial neuropathy. Fractionated stereotactic radiosurgery was used in an effort to maintain effective therapy while minimizing toxicity of treatment.

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