Publications by authors named "Waldron J"

The development and validation of a thirty item, Likert-type scale designed to measure medical students' attitudes to psychiatry-the ATP-30 (Attitudes Toward Psychiatry-30 items)-are described. We had hoped to demonstrate that 'attitude to psychiatry' was not a unitary matter but an amalgam of attitudes to a number of things to do with psychiatric practice. This hope was not fulfilled, as a unitary dimension was obtained.

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Six drug-free depressed patients, each of whom acted as their own control, were studied for eleven consecutive days during which they were twice deprived of sleep for either 36 or 40 hours. The sequence of events was baseline (3 days), SD, recovery (3 days), SD, recovery (3 days). Blind ratings of clinical state were made on the basis of four-hourly interviews (standardized for each case), which were videotaped; sleep was monitored by conventional electrophysiological methods.

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By chance, we were able to record for five consecutive nights the sleep of a 61-year-old woman before each of two successive depressive episodes. In this patient, marked changes in EEG sleep (notably a decline in "sleep efficiency") preceded both episodes. These changes are considered to be of predictive, but not of etiological, significance.

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By application of combined structural and functional analyses, most lymphoid neoplasms may be categorized as of T- or B-cell origin. T lymphocyte neoplasms include types of acute and chronic lymphocytic leukemias, certain cutaneous and node-based lymphomas, and lymphomas of thymocytes (convoluted lymphocytic lymphomas). Although much less frequent than B-cell neoplasms, these T-cell neoplasms are important because their recognition has therapeutic and prognostic significance.

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A group inservice training program for teachers of psychotic children is described. Special emphasis is given to the teacher's emotional needs in dealing with these very difficult children. The training is designed to enhance mutual support and the acceptance of feelings associated with working with psychotic children.

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In a continuing study of patients with lymphoproliferative diseases, six adult patients were encountered with a distinctive malignant lymphoma of peripheral T-lymphocyte origin. Cell suspensions from lymph nodes of these patients contained a pleomorphic, cytologically atypical population of lymphocytes, of which an average 58% marked as T cells in the E-rosette test. The average percent of surface immunoglobulin-bearing B cells in these suspensions was 6%; they were of polyclonal distribution.

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Acute renal insufficiency developed in three patients receiving chemotherapy for tuberculosis. It is proposed that acute diffuse interstitial nephritis related to the drugs was responsible for the renal injury. Recovery of renal function was slow and incomplete.

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The two independent forces leading to the development of a new type of facility for medical education were the desire to utilize modern educational concepts (some of which are difficult to employ in traditional hospital settings) and the need to expand students' contact with clinical patients. This special facility, known as the Clinical Learning Center, resembles the ultimate setting of medical practice, that is, the physician's office, and it depends upon volunteer patients who come there primarily to contribute to the educational program while deriving no medical care. Students and instructors have appreciated the opportunity for feedback; the quiet educational environment; the graduated learning experiences; and the use of various resources, especially videotape recording and playback of the clinical encounter.

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Tissues from malignant lymphomas with both nodular and diffuse growth patterns, thought by light microscopy to be composed of cells of follicular center cell (FCC) origin, Were examined by electron microscopy; the tumor cells were similar to lymphoid cells found in reactive follicular centers. Tumor cells from neoplasms thought to be composed of cleaved FCC often had more pronounced nuclear folding than did cleaved FCC of reactive follicles, whereas cells in tumors of noncleaved FCC type were indistinguishable from their presumed counterparts in reactive follicles. Large cell noeplasms, previously classified as "histiocytic" lymphomas were composed of cells with ultrastructural characteristics of transformed lymphocytes; they showed neither ultrastructural nor cytochemical features of mononuclear phagocytes.

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Lymphomas with histologic features indicating a follicular center cell (FCC) origin were analyzed from 26 patients of a group of 45 consecutive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patinets whose tumors were studied for B- and T-cell characteristics. They were compared with benign, reactive lymphoid tissue from 14 patients. Cell suspensions from biopsy material, blood, or bone marrow were examined for surface Ig and for rosette formation with sheep erythrocytes (E rosettes).

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