Publications by authors named "Yuen W"

Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy of repeated chemoembolization in patients with inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).

Patients And Methods: One hundred thirty-two patients with HCC underwent transcatheter arterial chemoembolization with an emulsion of iodized oil and cisplatin. In 104 patients, "light" gelatin sponge embolization was also used.

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Background: Nonnasal CD56+ T/natural killer (NK) cell lymphomas with morphologic and immunogenetic features similar to those of the distinctive nasal T/NK cell lymphoma are uncommon and have been characterized only recently. They show predominantly extranodal presentation, high stage disease, a highly aggressive course, strong association with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and lack of T cell receptor gene rearrangement. Only one previously reported case had a testicular presentation, although the testis is not uncommonly involved during the course of disease in both nasal and nonnasal T/NK cell lymphomas.

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A 53 year old man with a large mesenchymal hamartoma is reported. Only a few bile ducts could be found in the periphery of the lesion and no hepatocytes were identified within the lesion. As far as is known, this is the only adult male patient reported to date.

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The results of a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo controlled, crossover trial of lamotrigine as add-on therapy in patients with partial seizures poorly controlled by established antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are presented. The study consisted of two 12 week treatment periods each followed by a four week washout period. During the lamotrigine treatment phase, patients received 150 mg or 300 mg daily dose depending on their concomitant AEDs to achieve concentrations in the range 1-3 mg/L.

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Eighty patients with inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were treated by transcatheter arterial chemoembolization using an emulsion of Lipiodol and Cisplatin. In 59 patients, gelfoam embolization was also given. The tumour size ranged from 0.

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Bleeding angiodysplasia of the gastrointestinal tract poses frustrating challenges to clinicians because these minute vascular lesions are difficult to diagnose pre-operatively and to locate intra-operatively. During the past 12 years, 24 patients were treated for histopathologically confirmed bleeding angiodysplasia of the gastrointestinal tract. Pre-operative investigations and intra-operative localization followed a fixed protocol for patients with gastrointestinal bleeding of obscure origin.

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In the past 12 years, we operated upon 49 patients with bleeding lesions of the small intestine. After endoscopic examination and barium studies of the upper and lower gastrointestinal tract excluded esophagogastroduodenal and lesions of the colon and rectum, preoperative examinations consisted of technetium-99m pertechnetate scan, technetium-99m labeled erythrocyte scan, barium studies of the small intestine and selective visceral angiogram. In one patient, diagnostic laparotomy had to be done before any procedure because of severe bleeding and angiosarcoma of the ileum.

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A prospective, randomized evaluation of operative choledochoscopy was carried out during emergency surgery in patients with acute cholangitis or acute suppurative cholangitis when conservative management had failed. After common bile duct exploration, 79 patients were randomized to have choledochoscopy and 78 patients to the control group. Laboratory and clinical parameters showed that choledochoscopy did not increase the incidence of septicaemia, acute pancreatitis, persistent cholangitis, postoperative wound sepsis, intraperitoneal sepsis and hospital mortality.

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The efficacy of lamotrigine (LTG), a new antiepileptic drug (AED) chemically unrelated to drugs in current use, was evaluated in 21 in-patients (18 males, 3 females; mean age 34.6; range 23-42 years) with severe refractory epilepsy. An add-on double-blind placebo-controlled crossover design was used, with 12 week treatment periods, and a 6 week washout period.

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A total of 203 patients were randomized into a prospective trial to compare short (SC) versus long courses (LC) of systemic antibiotic for acute cholecystitis treated by early cholecystectomy. The initial pre-operative management was the same and all patients received 2 g of cefamandole intravenously just before operation. Two further doses of cefamandole 500 mg were given 6 and 12 h later for patients on SC while the antibiotic was continued at 500 mg at 6 h intervals for 7 days for patients on LC.

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A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial is reported of lamotrigine as add-on treatment in therapy-resistant epilepsy. A within-patients serial design was used, with two 3-month treatment periods and an intervening 6-week washout/crossover period. An unblinded investigator adjusted lamotrigine dosage to achieve a plasma concentration within a previously predicted therapeutic range.

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Eighty six women attending Middle Road Hospital with endocervical gonococcal infection were evaluated. Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated in 27% of them. Women co-infected with C.

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Metal deficiency or toxicity states have been recognized as a cause of several neurological disorders and are suspected in others. We analyzed four brain regions (frontal cortex, caudate nucleus, substantia nigra, and cerebellum) in 36 human brains for concentrations of 24 metals (Ag, Al, As, B, Be, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, Pb, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Ni, P, Se, Ti, V, W, Zn). Regional metal concentrations, measured using atomic absorption and atomic emission spectroscopy, were compared between 9 Parkinson's disease (PD) brains, 15 brains from patients with other chronic neurological diseases, and 12 control brains.

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Three studies conducted in 1982, 1985 and 1988 investigated chlamydial infections in female prostitutes. In 1982, 115 prostitutes with culture-positive gonorrhoea were studied; 8% were coinfected with Chlamydia trachomatis. In 1985, 86 female prostitutes and in 1988, 100 female prostitutes attending for routine tests were examined.

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The antiepileptic effect of lamotrigine (LTG) was assessed in a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial in 24 adult patients with refractory partial seizures. LTG or placebo was added to existing antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). The dose of LTG varied from 75 to 400 mg daily.

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Six patients with angiodysplasias of the small intestine were diagnosed preoperatively with selective angiography during the past eight years. Enteroscopy was used to identify these vascular lesions intraoperatively. Lesions were ulcerated in four patients, had a bleeding vessel tip in one patient and appeared as a nonulcerated reddish patch in the other.

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Two hundred women attending the sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinic at Middle Road Hospital were investigated. Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated from 32% of women who were contacts of men with nongonococcal urethritis, 15% of contacts of gonococcal urethritis, 27% of contacts of unspecified STD, and 13% of women without any history of STD in their sex partners. Overall, Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated from 17% of 200 women, Neisseria gonorrhoeae from 13% of 199 women, Candida albicans from 34% and Trichomonas vaginalis from 6% of 197 women.

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In the past 9 years, we have operated on 56 patients with gastrointestinal bleeding of obscure origin. Selective visceral angiography demonstrated the bleeding lesions in 24 of the 30 patients who underwent this investigation. Six of these 24 patients, however, had a negative angiogram initially and the lesions were only demonstrated on a repeat angiogram.

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To determine whether some of the side effects of antiepileptic drugs could be due to zinc depletion within tissues, zinc concentrations in the polymorphonuclear leucocytes in 26 epileptic patients receiving valproate or carbamazepine and 14 controls were assessed. There was no difference in zinc concentration in leucocytes among the three groups and no evidence of zinc depletion. Valproate and carbamazepine may affect the intracellular distribution of zinc.

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A prospective study was performed on 635 patients with appendicitis operated on by 7 trainees and 119 patients operated on by 6 senior surgeons with more than 8 years of surgical experience. In patients with normal appendices, postoperative sepsis was extremely low. For early and late appendicitis, the infection rates of the trainees decreased as experiences accumulated, but they were still higher than that of the senior surgeons.

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