A prospective study of the impact of training 41 hospice nurses in assessment skills was used to test hypotheses that blocking behaviours would be used more when patients disclosed feelings and used less when nurses perceived that they had satisfactory professional support. Each nurse was asked to assess a patient's current problems before and after feedback training and 8 months later. Audiotape recordings of these interviews were rated by trained raters. They determined the frequency of nurses' responses which had the function of blocking patient disclosure and the emotional level of patient disclosure. Before each patient assessment each nurse was interviewed and questionnaires administered to measure her perceptions of the support she received. Blocking behaviours were most evident when patients disclosed their feelings (Kendalls r = 0.36, P < 0.001). In interviews containing most patient disclosure of feeling, blocking was significantly less (r = -0.24, P < 0.5) when the nurse felt that practical help would be available if needed and when the nurse felt that her direct supervisor was concerned about the nurse's own welfare (r = -0.37, P < 0.005).
We describe a novel method for the calculation of endothelial permeability surface area product from dynamic contrast enhanced MRI. The technique uses iterative estimation to automatically decompose tissue residue function into intravascular and extravascular components, which are subsequently used to generate tumour blood volume, which is equal to relative cerebral blood volume calculated from T(1) weighted images and corrected for contamination by contrast agent leakage (rCBV(T1)(corrected), and endothelial permeability (k(fp)) maps. The technique was assessed in patients with cerebral glioma (n=5) by examining the reproducibility of endothelial permeability and rCBV(T1)(corrected) between two separate examinations conducted with a 2-day interval. The technique produces maps of endothelial permeability that appear to be free of any contribution from intravascular contrast agent. Maps of rCBV(T1)(corrected) show close correlation with maps of blood volume calculated from independently acquired dynamic susceptibility weighted MRI examinations, with no evidence of residual permeability effects. The results were highly reproducible with strong intra-class correlation between the two examinations for mean values and for 97.5 percentiles of endothelial permeability and rCBV(T1)(corrected). The excellent reproducibility of this technique and the ability to calculate endothelial permeability and rCBV(T1)(corrected) values from rapidly acquired data sets offer considerable advantages over conventional approaches and support the use of this methodology for therapeutic monitoring or trials of novel therapeutic agents.
Summary One hundred resected cases of squamous cell carcinomas of the oesophagus were reviewed and a series of histological criteria related to the survival time. Two histological features were important in the assessment of survival. Good prognostic factors were a marked lymphocytic response to the tumour and a lack of intravenous tumour infiltration. Presence of tumour in the middle third of the oesophagus, infiltration through the muscularis propria, severe tumour necrosis, glandular or small cell tumour differentiation, lymphatic invasion and lack of peritumoural fibrosis were all factors which tended to worsen prognosis. None of these factors reached statistical significance. The degree of squamous differentiation had no effect on survival.Oesophageal carcinoma is one of the most lethal cancers in terms of cure rates and survival. Obstructive symptoms present late, there is lack of surgical access to many of these tumours and a further adverse factor is the involvement of adjacent vital organs.Most histological studies in oesophageal carcinoma have been performed on autopsy cases (Mandard et al., 1981;Sons & Borchard, 1986
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.