Publications by authors named "Szeifert G"

Összefoglaló. A cauda equina daganatai a leggyakrabban lumbagós panaszokkal jelentkeznek. Általában késői stádiumban ismerik fel őket, mivel lassan növekednek, az anatómiai környezet tágas, a megjelenő tünetek nem specifikusak, valamint az érintett betegek többsége fiatal és egyébként egészséges.

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Összefoglaló. Az agyi érrendszer elzáródásos panaszai elsősorban felnőttkorban jelentkeznek, nem ritkák azonban gyermekek esetében sem. A gyermekkori stroke gyakorisága 2,5/1 000 000 fő; ilyenkor általában az arteria carotis interna vagy az arteria cerebri media érintett.

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Cosmic strings can give rise to a large variety of interesting astrophysical phenomena. Among them, powerful bursts of gravitational waves (GWs) produced by cusps are a promising observational signature. In this Letter we present a search for GWs from cosmic string cusps in data collected by the LIGO and Virgo gravitational wave detectors between 2005 and 2010, with over 625 days of live time.

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Morphological studies after Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKRS) revealed endothelial destruction followed by spindle-shaped cell proliferation in the subendothelial region and in the connective tissue stroma of arteriovenous malformation (AVM) vessels. Histological, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural characteristics of this spindle-shaped cell population in the irradiated AVMs were reminiscent of those described as myofibroblasts in wound healing processes and pathological fibromatoses. These modified fibroblasts have contractile capacity, therefore this might contribute to the vessel occlusion, shrinking process and final volume reduction of AVMs after GKRS.

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Histopathological investigations revealed acute-, subacute-, and chronic-type tissue responses, accompanied by inflammatory cell reaction in radiosurgery treated cerebral metastases originating from different primary cancers. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that the preponderance of CD68-positive macrophages and CD3-positive T lymphocytes in the inflammatory infiltration developed in better controlled metastases ( > 5 months). In contrast, it was sparse or absent in poorly controlled neoplasms ( < 5 months) after radiosurgery.

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Objective: Data were analyzed to assess the value of stereotactically applied intracystic colloidal yttrium-90 (YTx) for the treatment of recurrent cystic craniopharyngiomas during a 30-year period.

Methods: This article compares data from 73 YTx procedures in 60 patients between 1975 and 2006. The cumulative beta dose aimed at the inner surface of the cyst wall was 300 Gy.

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Objective: To study histopathologic changes and the role of the microglia/macrophage cell in the therapeutic effect of I-125 interstitial brachytherapy on the cerebral gliomas.

Methods: Out of a series of 60 cases with cerebral astrocytomas and other brain tumors treated with I-125 interstitial brachytherapy, autopsy materials were available in ten cases 0.75 and 60 months after irradiation.

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In vitro isometric myograph and histopathological studies were performed on rat middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) to explore changes in contractile capacity following experimental Gamma Knife radiosurgery. Right MCAs were treated with 25 Gy and 50 Gy at the 50% isodose line, while contralateral vessels received 15 Gy and 20 Gy at the 20% isodose region. Survival period varied from 3 to 18 months.

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The purpose of this study was to investigate histopathological changes and the role of the microglia/macrophage cell system in the therapeutic effect of iodine-125 (125I) interstitial brachytherapy on cerebral gliomas. Out of a series of 60 cases harboring cerebral astrocytomas and other brain tumors treated with 125I interstitial brachytherapy, autopsy material was available in 10 cases between 0.75 and 60 months after irradiation.

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Between 1996 and 2004, 27 patients with low grade gliomas (WHO grade I-II), 10 patients with WHO grade III gliomas and 6 patients with glioblastoma multiforme (WHO grade IV) were treated with stereotactic brachytherapy using low-dose rate iodine-125 (125I) isotope seeds at the Department of Neurosurgery, St. John's Hospital, Budapest, Hungary. In all 43 cases, brachytherapy was used for surgically inoperable gliomas: in 32 cases for recurrent gliomas and in 11 cases as a primary treatment.

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Histopathological, ultrastructural and polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic examinations were carried out on biopsy, cyst fluid, surgical pathology and autopsy specimens obtained from 7 cystic craniopharyngioma cases before and after yttrium-90 silicate colloid (90Y) irradiation. Light microscopy revealed that the lining epithelial tumor cell layer of the cyst wall was destroyed, and scar tissue containing large amount of hyaline degenerated collagen bundles replaced it. Proliferative postirradiation vasculopathy was also demonstrated in the cyst wall following 90Y installation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study assessed the effectiveness of using intracavitary irradiation with yttrium-90 (90Y) for treating cystic craniopharyngiomas over a nearly 30-year follow-up period.
  • About 79% average reduction in cyst size was found, with 29 out of 47 cysts completely disappearing within a year, suggesting a strong treatment success.
  • Neuroophthalmological outcomes were generally favorable if the optic disc was normal at treatment; otherwise, any existing visual damage was irreversible, highlighting the importance of the patient's condition at the time of treatment.
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Autopsy, 3D MRI and histopathological findings are presented in a patient who had suffered from trigeminal neuralgia and was treated two times by radiosurgery. The first treatment was performed with 90 Gy at the distal part of the nerve. Because of recurrent pain, a second irradiation was carried out delivering 70 Gy at a more proximal segment of the nerve 10 months later.

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Article Synopsis
  • Stereotactic radiosurgery is debated in treating cerebral cavernous malformations (CVMs), highlighting the need for more thorough research.
  • A study of a thalamic CVM after 40-Gy irradiation showed endothelial cell destruction and significant fibrosis in the surrounding tissue.
  • These findings resemble changes seen in arteriovenous malformations post-Gamma Knife surgery, indicating that radiation affects both blood vessels and connective tissue in CVMs.
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Histological, immunohistochemical and electron microscopic investigations were carried out in a series of surgical pathology material that was removed from 7 patients. They were harboring cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) that had been previously treated with Leksell Gamma Knife radiosurgery, and presented subsequent bleeding 10-52 months after treatment. Light microscopic studies revealed a spindle cell proliferation in the connective tissue stroma and in the subendothelial region of the irradiated AVM vessels.

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The aim of this study was to assess the role of Gamma Knife radiosurgery in the complex management of cerebral astrocytomas. Out of a series with more than 1,000 brain tumor cases treated at the Lars Leksell Center for Gamma Knife Surgery, UVA, 74 astrocytomas were selected for the present review. The tumor either disappeared or decreased in 60% of grade 1 astrocytomas (n = 15), and 71% tumor control was achieved in grade 2 astrocytomas (n = 17) following radiosurgery.

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Systematic human pathological background to brain tumor radiosurgery explaining biological and pathophysiological effects of focused irradiation barely exists. The goal of this study was to explore histopathological changes evoked by single high-dose irradiation in a set of different brain tumors following Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKRS). Light microscopy revealed that GKRS evokes degenerative and proliferative pathological changes in the parenchyma, stroma and vessels of the irradiated tumors.

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The term radiosurgery signifies any kind of application of ionizing radiation energy, in experimental biology or clinical medicine, aiming at the precise and complete destruction of chosen target structures containing healthy and/or pathological cells, without significant concomitant or late radiation damage to adjacent tissues. The goal of this study is to explore the short- and long-term pathophysiological effects of high-dose focused irradiation on neural tissue and its pathologies with histological, electron-microscopical tissue culture and biological-biochemical methods. Radiosurgical pathology focuses its scope and microscope on tissue, cellular, genetic and molecular changes in the human organism and experimental animals, or in cell lines and other in vitro experiments, generated by the ionizing radiation delivered from radiosurgical devices.

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The authors analyzed long-term follow-up data to assess the value of intracavitary irradiation with stereotactically implanted beta-emitting radioisotope (90)Y-silicate colloid for the treatment of craniopharyngiomas. Fifty-seven craniopharyngiomas in 42 patients were selected for retrospective analysis. The yttrium-90 was implanted intracavitally, using computerized tomography-guided and three-dimensional stereotactic treatment planning.

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Object: Progressive obliteration occurs in arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) after radiosurgery; however, the risk of hemorrhage remains until the obliteration process is complete. The authors sought to enhance the radiation effect and reduce the risk of hemorrhage by facilitating faster vessel obliteration. To that end, a combination of a lower radiation dose with the addition of a radiosensitizing agent was compared with the effect of a higher radiation dose alone.

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Background: To the authors' knowledge, comprehensive human pathologic investigations that explore fundamental radiosurgical effects on metastatic brain tumors are sparse in the literature. The objective of this study was to analyze histopathologic findings in a set of clinically recurrent cerebral metastases after patients underwent stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).

Methods: In a series of 7500 patients who underwent radiosurgery, 2020 patients (27%) harbored cerebral metastases.

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Objective: The authors present and evaluate the experiences with 76 frontolateral keyhole craniotomies performed for supratentorial intracranial tumors via superciliary skin incisions.

Method: The exploration is a modification of the generally used pterional approach. Out of a series of 302 cases operated on with frontolateral keyhole craniotomies via superciliary skin incisions, 76 had various tumors at the frontal base, intra-, supra-, parasellar and intraorbital regions.

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In this paper, the role of conventional radiotherapy and radiosurgery in the management of pituitary tumors is reviewed. After a short summary of the mechanism of action of irradiation therapy and the types of different irradiation techniques, the therapeutic effects and side effects are analyzed in patients with different types of pituitary tumors, including our own experience with conventional radiotherapy and radiosurgery in patients with acromegaly. Conventional fractionated radiotherapy has long been used to control growth and/or hormonal secretion of residual or recurrent pituitary tumors.

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Object: The authors analyzed morphological alterations at the subcellular level by undertaking transmission electron microscopy in arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) after gamma knife surgery (GKS).

Methods: Histological, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic investigations were performed in a series of pathological specimens obtained in seven patients. The patients harbored cerebral AVMs that had been previously treated with GKS and had suffered subsequent bleeding 10 to 52 months after treatment.

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