Annals of surgery
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The authors undertook a prospective study of trauma victims in the intensive care unit (ICU) to investigate the clinical course of pneumonia and the local and systemic immune responses to the pneumonia. ⋯ Pneumonia prolonged duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU and hospital stay, and overall infectious morbidity. Although immune suppression has been recognized as a result of initial injury, the development of pneumonia coincided with the nadir of immune function. Poor outcome patients were clinically identifiable 5 days after pneumonia and immunologically identifiable within 2 days. Moreover, there was localized suppression of pulmonary leukocytes at the site of the infiltrate compared to the uninfected lobes. This same alteration was noted in experimental Klebsiella pneumoniae pneumonia. This evidence suggests that there is active immune participation within the respiratory system. It also suggests that there are predispositions to pulmonary infections, and it may allow immune modulation targeted to pulmonary leukocytes to hasten clinical recovery and minimize pulmonary dysfunction.
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This study determined whether genomic amplification of HER-2/neu or mutations of the p53 and ras genes were present in gastrinomas. ⋯ Amplification of the HER-2/neu gene, but not alterations of either p53 or ras, may be involved in the pathogenesis of gastrinomas. The unique PT cell line will be a useful model to further elucidate the molecular mechanisms that contribute to gastrinoma formation and growth.
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To determine the association between measures of medical manpower available to treat trauma patients and county trauma death rates in the United States. The primary hypothesis was that greater availability of medical manpower to treat trauma injury would be associated with lower trauma death rates. ⋯ This study confirms previous work that showed a strong relation among measures of poverty, rural setting, and increased county trauma death rates. It also found that counties with more board-certified surgeons per capita and with more surgeons with an increased interest (AAST membership) or increased training (ATLS) in trauma care have lower per-capita trauma death rates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Comparative Study
Prediction of surgical resectability in patients with hepatic colorectal metastases.
To evaluate the efficacy of two distinct imaging techniques to predict, before operation, unresectability compared with standard computed tomographic scan (CT). ⋯ False-positive results by HAPS and CTAP may limit the ability of these tests to accurately predict unresectability before operation and may deny patients the chance for surgical resection. The HAPS study does, however, detect small lesions not seen by CT or CTAP. Standard CT, although less sensitive, followed by surgery and intraoperative ultrasound, does not necessarily preclude patients who could be resected.
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Overexpression of the p53 and HER-2/neu oncogenes are the two most common genetic abnormalities associated with breast cancer. Shorter survival time has been reported in patients with tumors with p53 or HER-2/neu. This report analyzes a retrospective cohort of early stage breast cancers for both oncogenes and relates overexpression to clinicopathologic parameters and survival. ⋯ The p53 and HER-2/neu oncogenes have proven but limited prognostic value. An approach that combines several molecular genetic markers with established pathologic criteria may help physicians to make more accurate predictions of prognosis in patients with early stage breast cancer.