4 results match your criteria: "University of Ottawa (Ottawa General Hospital)[Affiliation]"
Cancer
March 2021
Sarcoma Service, Departments of Surgery and Medical Oncology, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan, Italy.
Background: In patients with retroperitoneal sarcoma (RPS), the incidence of recurrence after surgery remains high. Novel treatment approaches are needed. This retrospective study evaluated patients with primary, high-risk RPS who received neoadjuvant systemic therapy followed by surgery to 1) determine the frequency and potential predictors of radiologic tumor responses and 2) assess clinical outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone Marrow Transplant
February 1994
Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa (Ottawa General Hospital), Canada.
An unblinded, historical controlled study of 49 bone marrow transplant (BMT) patients was carried out in our institution to assess the effect of oral pentoxifylline (PTX) on BMT regimen related toxicity (RRT). Twenty-eight consecutively treated BMT patients (17 allogeneic, 11 autologous) were entered into the PTX treatment group and treated with oral PTX 400 mg at intervals of 4 h from day -10 until day +35 or discharge, whichever came sooner. These were compared with a control group of 21 BMT patients (14 allogeneic, 7 autologous).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep
April 1993
University of Ottawa & Ottawa General Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Sleep patterns in reading disabled (n = 24) and normal control (n = 15) 8-10-year-old boys were compared to examine suggested relationships among sleep, maturational and cognitive processes. Sleep was recorded in the laboratory for four consecutive nights (two adaptation, two baseline) using standard polysomnography. Analyses revealed variations across nights for both groups reflecting adaptation to the sleep laboratory, but such effects were attenuated in reading disabled subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
June 1988
Division of Neurology, University of Ottawa/Ottawa General Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Precipitating stimuli were investigated in a 24-year-old woman with primary reading epilepsy. Reading material was presented on a microcomputer video display monitor under controlled conditions while the patient underwent EEG radiotelemetry/video monitoring. We examined the relative contribution of the following variables utilizing a factorial design: eye movements, reading aloud versus reading silently, linguistic complexity, and concentrations.
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