Lancet
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Comparison of radiation side-effects of conformal and conventional radiotherapy in prostate cancer: a randomised trial.
Radical radiotherapy is commonly used to treat localised prostate cancer. Late chronic side-effects limit the dose that can be given, and may be linked to the volume of normal tissues irradiated. Conformal radiotherapy allows a smaller amount of rectum and bladder to be treated, by shaping the high-dose volume to the prostate. We assessed the ability of this new technology to lessen the risk of radiation-related effects in a randomised controlled trial of conformal versus conventional radiotherapy. ⋯ Conformal techniques significantly lowered the risk of late radiation-induced proctitis after radiotherapy for prostate cancer. Widespread introduction of these radiotherapy treatment methods is appropriate. Our results are the basis for dose-escalation studies to improve local tumour control.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Arterial stenting and balloon angioplasty in ostial atherosclerotic renovascular disease: a randomised trial.
Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) for ostial atherosclerotic renal-artery stenosis has poor results. Angioplasty with stent placement (PTAS) may be more effective. We undertook a randomised prospective study to compare PTA with PTAS in patients with ostial atherosclerotic renal-artery stenosis. ⋯ PTAS is a better technique than PTA to achieve vessel patency in ostial atherosclerotic renal-artery stenosis. Primary PTAS and primary PTA plus PTAS as rescue therapy have similar outcomes. However, the burden of reintervention after PTA outweighs the potential saving in stents, so primary PTAS is a better approach to use.
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Various symptoms in military personnel in the Persian Gulf War 1990-91 have caused international speculation and concern. We investigated UK servicemen. ⋯ Service in the Gulf War was associated with various health problems over and above those associated with deployment to an unfamiliar hostile environment. Since associations of ill health with adverse events and exposures were found in all cohorts, however, they may not be unique and causally implicated in Gulf-War-related illness. A specific mechanism may link vaccination against biological warfare agents and later ill health, but the risks of illness must be considered against the protection of servicemen.
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Prion diseases are associated with the accumulation of an abnormal isoform of cellular prion protein (PrPSc), which is the principal constituent of prions. Prions replicate in lymphoreticular tissues before neuroinvasion, suggesting that lymphoreticular biopsy samples may allow early diagnosis by detection of PrPSc. Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (variant CJD) is difficult to distinguish from common psychiatric disorders in its early stages and definitive diagnosis has relied on neuropathology. We studied lymphoreticular tissues from a necropsy series and assessed tonsillar biopsy samples as a diagnostic investigation for human prion disease. ⋯ We found that if, in the appropriate clinical context, a tonsil biopsy sample was positive for PrPSc, variant CJD could be diagnosed, which obviates the need for a brain biopsy sample to be taken. Our results also show that variant CJD has a different pathogenesis to sporadic CJD.