3 results match your criteria: "and Seattle Veterans Administration Medical Center[Affiliation]"
Primary myelofibrosis is a clonal haemopoietic disorder, incurable with conventional therapy, and associated with a median survival of 4-5 years. Patients with polycythaemia vera and essential thrombocytosis who progress into a myelofibrotic picture also have a poor prognosis. Between 1980 and 1996, 13 patients with myelofibrosis due to one of these three myeloproliferative disorders (primary myelofibrosis [n=8], essential thrombocytosis [n=3], polycythaemia vera [n=2]) underwent allogeneic marrow transplantation in Seattle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosurgery
March 1996
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Washington and Seattle Veterans Administration Medical Center, USA.
Magnetic resonance neurography was used to directly image cervical spinal nerves in patients with clinical and radiographic evidence of cervical radiculopathy. A magnetic resonance imaging phased-array coil system was used to obtain high-resolution coronal T1-weighted spin echo, coronal/axial T2-weighted fast spin echo with fat saturation, and coronal/axial fast short tau inversion recovery weighted images of the cervical spine and spinal nerves. Three patients with neck and upper extremity pain and one asymptomatic volunteer were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosurgery
March 1996
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Washington, and Seattle Veterans Administration Medical Center, USA.
The diagnosis of ulnar nerve entrapment at the elbow has relied primarily on clinical and electrodiagnostic findings. Recently, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been used in the evaluation of peripheral nerve entrapment disorders to document signal and configuration changes in nerves. We performed a prospective study on a population of 31 elbows in 27 patients with ulnar nerve entrapment at the elbow.
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