We adapted and introduced in our laboratory a simplified animal model of radiation-induced enterocolitis. After a shielding of the parenchymatous organs, our dose-response studies revealed that 20 Gy x-ray radiation resulted in about 20% mortality and reproducible lesions in the terminal ileum and proximal colon. These changes are optimal for pharmacologic studies since they may be decreased or aggravated by drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe evaluated the effect of radiation therapy in 57 patients with obstruction of a large bronchus with NSCC. Response with aeration of the atelectatic lung was seen in 12 patients (21 percent). Three patients (5 percent) showed partial response with persistent partial atelectasis, and nine patients (16 percent) showed good response with complete aeration of the atelectatic lung.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred and twenty patients with early glottic carcinoma received radiation therapy at the University of Maryland Hospital from 1959 to 1977. The radiation dose ranged from 55 Gy in 4 weeks for small T1a lesions to 65 Gy in 61/2 weeks for T2 lesions. The local control rates by irradiation alone for stages T1a, T1b, and T2 were 92, 91 and 88 per cent, respectively, while 5-year determinate disease-free survival rates were 96 per cent for stage I disease and 88 per cent for stage II disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetastatic basal cell carcinoma is a rare, malignant neoplasm associated with poor survival. A 63-year-old woman had an extensive primary keratinizing basal cell carcinoma of the scalp, with metastases to the regional lymph nodes of the neck. Disease in the primary site and in the regional lymph nodes was controlled by surgery and irradiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring the period from 1969--1974, 561 patients with proven invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix were treated by irradiation only in the Department of Radiation Therapy, University of Maryland Hospital. Of these, 82 patients were identified as having D & C positive for squamous cell cancer present in the curettings with or without endometrial tissue. Clinical staging was done using FIGO guidelines and the treatment of endometrial extension was the same as with regular cervical cancer.
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