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Metabolic Disturbances in Relation to Serum Calcium and Primary HyperparathyroidismHagström, Emil January 2006 (has links)
<p>Primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT), characterized by elevated serum levels of calcium and parathyroid hormone (PTH), is associated with a number of metabolic derangements causing secondary manifestations. These include osteoporosis and increased risk of fractures, but also risk factors for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. These risk factors include impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), dyslipidemia, increased body mass index and hypertension. While the skeletal abnormalities are mainly due to elevated PTH, the latter disturbances are still unexplained. Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), IGT, dyslipidemia and hypertension are all included in the metabolic syndrome, also associated with morbidity and mortality in cardiovascular diseases.</p><p>In this thesis, decreased bone mineral density (BMD) and variables of the metabolic syndrome are explored in patients with mild and normocalcemic pHPT before and after parathyroidectomy. To further investigate the relationship between insulin sensitivity and calcium, a community-based cohort was investigated.</p><p>In two different patient cohorts of pHPT, lipoprotein alterations with decreased levels of HDL-cholesterol and elevated triglycerides were found in association with a high frequency of IGT, NIDDM and decreased insulin sensitivity. Parathyroidectomy had effects on the dyslipidemia and in part on the glucose metabolism. The disturbed glucose metabolism in pHPT was substantiated by results from the general population by a negative association between insulin sensitivity, measured by hyperinsulinemic clamp, and serum calcium.</p><p>In conclusion, normocalcemic, mild and overt pHPT are associated with a range of risk factors for cardiovascular diseases, development of NIDDM and decreased BMD in cortical as well as trabecular bone. These findings explain, at least in part, the elevated morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular disease as well as fractures, reported in pHPT patients. Moreover, in the general population, serum calcium is associated with decreased insulin sensitivity. Parathyroidectomy has positive effects on several, but not all, of the investigated metabolic parameters.</p>
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Rectal Cancer : Can the Results be Further Improved?Folkesson, Joakim January 2006 (has links)
<p>The treatment of rectal cancer is complex and comprises: diagnostic measures; different preoperative treatments; a multitude of surgical and technical choices; possibilities of postoperative treatments and postoperative care and follow up. In this thesis, some aspects of this complex paradigm have been further investigated. One of the most feared complications after rectal cancer surgery is anastomotic leakage. The risk of anastomotic leakage is affected by non-influenceable factors related to the tumour and the patient. In the first paper, the risk of anastomotic leakage in relation to a surgical instrument, the circular stapler, was investigated. The risk of leakage was 7% or 11%, depending on the choice of instrument. In the second paper, a long-term evaluation of survival and local recurrence rates in the Swedish Rectal Cancer Trial was made. Randomisation was to either preoperative radiotherapy followed by surgery or surgery alone. After 13 years median follow-up, survival was 38% in the radiotherapy group and 30% in the surgery alone group. Differences in local recurrence rates were seen in all stages. Most rectal cancer operations carry a high risk of morbidity and mortality. For early stage cancers, a local procedure may be sufficient and in the third paper, population-based results of local excision of rectal cancer were explored. In stage I, cancer specific survival was the same after local excision as after major resection, but the relative survival was lower. The risk of local recurrence was higher after local excision than after resections. In the fourth paper, differences in survival rates in the Nordic countries and Scotland were investigated. The relative excess risk of death was highest in Denmark, but only in the first 90 postoperative days. </p><p>Through applying already existing knowledge and successively introducing new treatments, the results for rectal cancer treatment will be further improved.</p>
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Acute Abdominal PainLaurell, Helena January 2006 (has links)
<p>The aim was to identify diagnostic difficulties for acute abdominal pain at the emergency department and during hospital stay. A total of 3349 patients admitted to Mora Hospital with acute abdominal pain of up to seven days duration, were registered prospectively for history and clinical signs according to a structured schedule. The preliminary diagnosis from the attending physician at the emergency department, any investigations or surgery and final diagnosis were registered at a follow-up after at least one year. </p><p>There were no differences in diagnostic performance between physicians with 0.5 to 5 years of medical experience. The information collected and a careful examination of the patient was more important than formal competence. The main differential diagnostic problem was non-specific abdominal pain; this was the same for diagnoses requiring surgery. Patients originally diagnosed as not needing surgery had a median delay before operation of 22 hours (mean 40 hours, with 95% confidence interval of 30-50 hours), compared to 8 hours (mean 15 hours, 95% confidence interval of 12-28 hours) for patients with the same final follow-up diagnosis as the preliminary diagnosis. Constipation was a diagnostic pitfall, as 9% of the patients considered constipated required surgery for potentially life threatening reasons and 8% were later found to have an abdominal malignancy. Both the preliminary diagnosis and the discharge diagnosis were less reliable for elderly patients than for younger patients. Elderly patients often had specific organ disease and arrived at the emergency department after a longer history of abdominal pain. </p><p>This study confirms that assessment of suspected appendicitis can still be based on clinical judgements combined with laboratory tests. Classical clinical findings indicating localised inflammation, such as isolated pain in the right iliac fossa, rebound tenderness, right-sided rectal tenderness, pain migration to the right iliac fossa, local guarding and aggravation of pain when moving, were reliable for predicting acute appendicitis. A CT scan can be saved for the more equivocal cases of acute abdominal pain. A generous strategy regarding CT scan among elderly patients with acute abdominal pain, even in the absence of pronounced signs of an inflammatory intra-abdominal process, is recommended.</p>
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Sentinel Node Biopsy in Breast Cancer : Clinical and Immunological Aspectsde Boniface, Jana January 2007 (has links)
<p>The most important prognostic factor in breast cancer is the axillary lymph node status. The sentinel node biopsy (SNB) is reported to stage the axilla with an accuracy > 95 % in early breast cancer. Tumour-related perturbation of T-cell function has been observed in patients with malignancies, including breast cancer. The down-regulation of the important T-cell activation molecules CD3-ζ and CD28 may cause T-cell dysfunction, anergy, tolerance and deletion.</p><p>The expression of CD3-ζ and CD28 was evaluated in 25 sentinel node biopsies. The most pronounced down-regulation was seen in the paracortical area, where the best agreement between both parameters was observed. CD28 expression was significantly more suppressed in CD4+ than in CD8+ T-cells.</p><p>From the Swedish sentinel node database, 109 patients with breast cancer > 3 cm planned for both SNB and a subsequent axillary dissection were identified. The false negative rate (FNR) was 12.5%. Thirteen cases of tumour multifocality were detected on postoperative pathology. The FNR in this subgroup was higher (30.8%) than in patients with unifocal disease (7.8%; P = 0.012).</p><p>From the Swedish SNB multicentre cohort trial, 2246 sentinel node-negative patients who had not undergone further axillary surgery were selected for analysis. After a median follow-up time of 37 months (range 0-75), 13 isolated axillary recurrences (13/2246; 0.6%) were found. In another 14 cases, local or distant failure preceded or coincided with axillary relapse (27/2246; 1.2%). </p><p>In conclusion, the immunological analysis of the sentinel node might provide valuable prognostic information and aid selection of patients for immunotherapy. SNB is encouraged in breast cancer larger than 3 cm, if no multifocal growth pattern is present. The axillary recurrence rate after a negative SNB in Sweden is in accordance with international figures. However, a longer follow-up is mandatory before the true failure rate of the SNB can be determined.</p>
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Popliteal Artery Aneurysm : Epidemiology, Surgical Management and OutcomeRavn, Hans January 2007 (has links)
<p>Even if popliteal artery aneurysm (PAA) is the most common peripheral aneurysm, no single surgeon or institution has enough patients to study this disease with appropriate scientific methods, and no population-based investigation exists. </p><p>PAA epidemiology, treatment, management, and outcome were studied in a population-based study of 571 patients (717 legs) primarily operated on for PAAs and 100 episodes of preoperative thrombolysis in Sweden between 1987 and 2002. Patients were identified in the Swedish Vascular Registry and case-records were reviewed. Information on amputation and survival was obtained for all patients, and 190 patients were re-examined with ultrasound, after mean 7.2 years (range 2-18)</p><p>Median age was 71 years; 5.8% were women. Patients with unilateral PAA had AAA in 28%, increasing to 38% when PAAs were bilateral. Crude survival was 91.4% at one and 70% at five years, significantly lower than among age and sex matched controls. The cumulative incidence for operation of PAA in Sweden was estimated to 8.3/million person year. One-year amputation-rate was 8.8 %, increasing to 11% after follow-up (7.2 years). Independent risk factors for amputation within one year were poor run-off, age, emergency procedure, and prosthetic graft. Run-off was improved by preoperative thrombolysis among 87% of legs, when acute ischemia. After surgical repair with a medial approach the risk of late expansion of the aneurysm was 33%, with a posterior approach 8% , p=0.014. Among 190 re-examined patients, 108 (57%) had at least one additional aneurysm at index-operation, increasing to 131 (68%) at re-examination, the total number of aneurysms increasing by 42% (from 244 to 346).</p><p>Conclusions: Multiple aneurysms are common among patients operated on for PAA. Preoperative thrombolysis improves run-off and decreases the amputation-rate in PAAs with acute ischemia. Vein grafts do better than prosthetic grafts, especially when a long bypass is needed. Posterior approach, when possible, reduces the risk of late expansion. A complete examination of the aorto-iliac and femoro-popliteal arteries is warranted at the time of surgery. All patients should be kept under life-long surveillance in order to detect and treat newly developed aneurysms timely. Normal arterial segments should be re-examined after three years.</p>
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Understanding Oral Cancer - A Lifeworld ApproachRöing, Marta January 2007 (has links)
<p>Dental involvement with oral cancer patients during their treatment and rehabilitation can be long and intense. How can dental personnel better understand their role in the treatment of these patients? How does treatment affect the patients and their spouses? In searching for answers, the theories of phenomenography, phenomenology and hermeneutics are used to describe and interpret the experiences of the hospital dental treatment teams, oral cancer patients, and their spouses. </p><p>Study I reveals that hospital dental treatment teams perceive the encounter with head and neck cancer patients in three qualitatively different ways; as an act of caring, as a serious and responsible task, and as an overwhelming emotional situation, indicating that they are not always able to lean on education and professional training in dealing with situations with strong emotional impact. Study II gives insight into the lifeworld of oral cancer patients, and how the patient becomes embodied in a mouth that is increasingly `uncanny´, as it slowly ceases to function normally. Study III shows that oral cancer puts a hold on the lifeworld of the patients’ spouses which can be described as `living in a state of suspension´. These findings suggest that the support needs of patients and spouses appear to be greatest at treatment end, when, upon returning home, they are faced with the accumulated impact of the patients’ sickness and treatment. Study IV gives insight into what it may mean to live with the consequences of oral cancer, revealing a silent physical, emotional and existential struggle to adjust to a changed way of living. </p><p>This thesis raises the question if todays’ organisation of oral cancer care can meet the varying emotional and existential needs of treatment teams, patients and spouses that were brought to light.</p>
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Wnt/β-Catenin Signalling in Parathyroid TumoursBjörklund, Peyman January 2007 (has links)
<p>Primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) due to parathyroid tumours with hypersecretion of parathyroid hormone and hypercalcaemia is a common disease with incompletely understood etiology affecting more than 1 % of the population, primarily postmenopausal women. In secondary hyperparathyroidism (sHPT), parathyroid tumours develop in response to calcium and vitamin D deficiency generally in patients with uraemia. HPT is usually treated by surgical removal of enlarged parathyroid glands.</p><p>The aim of this thesis was to examine the Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway in parathyroid tumours.</p><p>Aberrantly accumulated β-catenin was found in all analysed pHPT and sHPT tumours, with a stabilising homozygous mutation (Ser37Ala) in 7.3% of the pHPT tumours. Truncation of the APC protein was not found. MYC, a β-catenin target gene was overexpressed in a substantial fraction of pHPT and sHPT parathyroid tumours. </p><p>A parathyroid tumour cell line (sHPT-1) was established from a hyperplastic gland removed at operation of a patient with sHPT. The cells produced parathyroid hormone and grew with a doubling time of approximately 72 hours. Stabilised nonphosphorylated transcriptionally active β-catenin was expressed. Efficient transfection of siRNA against β-catenin decreased expression of cyclin D1 and MYC, and inhibited cell growth with ensuring cell death. </p><p>The Wnt coreceptor LRP5 was found expressed with an internal deletion of 142 amino acids (LRP5Δ) in 86% and 100% of pHPT and sHPT tumours, respectively. Stabilising mutation of β-catenin and expression of LRP5Δ was mutually exclusive. Expression of LRP5Δ was required to maintain the nonphosphorylated transcriptionally active ß-catenin level, MYC expression, parathyroid cell growth in vitro, and tumour growth in transplanted SCID mice. Wnt3 ligand and LRP5Δ strongly activated transcription, and LRP5Δ was insensitive to inhibition by DKK1.</p><p>Aberrant accumulation of β-catenin by stabilising mutation or expression of LRP5Δ appears as a common pathogenic pathway for hyperparathyroid disease. LRP5Δ in particular presents a potential target for therapeutic intervention.</p>
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Cancer of the Colon and Rectum : Population Based Survival Analysis and Study on Adverse Effects of Radiation Therapy for Rectal CancerBirgisson, Helgi January 2006 (has links)
The Swedish Cancer Register was used to determine the relative survival rate in colon and rectal cancer and to estimate the occurrence of second cancers related to radiation therapy for rectal cancer. The Swedish Hospital Discharge Register and hospital records were used to estimate the rate of late adverse effects due to radiation therapy for rectal cancer. The whole Swedish population was the source of the survival studies. Patients participating in the Uppsala Trial and the Swedish Rectal Cancer Trial on radiation therapy for rectal cancer constituted the subjects of the studies on late adverse effects and second cancers. The main results of the survival analysis revealed a significant improvement in the 5-year relative survival rate for both colon and rectal cancer. During the time period 1960-1999, the survival improved from 39.6% to 57.2% in colon cancer and from 36.1% to 57.6% in rectal cancer. Patients irradiated for rectal cancer, in addition to surgery, were at increased risk for a second cancer compared to those treated by surgery alone. This risk increase was mainly found for cancers developing in organs within or adjacent to the irradiated target (relative risk (RR) 2.04; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.10–3.79). Furthermore, the most important late adverse effects of radiation therapy seem to be those on the gastrointestinal tract, in the form of small bowel obstruction (RR 1.88; 95%CI 1.10–3.20) and abdominal pain (RR 1.92; 95% CI 1.14–3.23). Overall, the benefit of radiation therapy was greater than its drawbacks, as a large reduction in local recurrences and better survival was noted in patients treated preoperatively with irradiation for rectal cancer. In conclusion, significant improvements in the survival of patients with colon and rectal cancers have occurred in the last decades, especially in patients with rectal cancer. These improvements probably are related to advances in surgical and adjuvant treatment. The radiation therapy has several drawbacks, however, including an increased risk of second cancers and of bowel obstruction. This emphasises the need to further improve the radiation technique and to select only those patients for radiation therapy who are most likely to benefit from it.
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Carotid Artery Stenosis : Surgical AspectsKragsterman, Björn January 2006 (has links)
Randomised controlled trials (RCT) have demonstrated a net benefit of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) in stroke prevention for patients with severe carotid artery stenosis as compared to best medical treatment. Results in routine clinical practice must not be inferior to those in the RCTs. The carotid arteries are clamped during CEA which may impair the cerebral perfusion. The aim of this thesis was to assess population-based outcomes from CEA, investigate risk factors for perioperative complications/late mortality and to evaluate effects of carotid clamping during CEA. In the Swedish vascular registry 6182 CEAs were registered during 1994-2003. Data on all CEAs were retrieved, analysed and validated. In the validation process no death or disabling stroke was unreported. The perioperative stroke or death rate was 4.3% for those with symptomatic and 2.1% for asymptomatic stenosis (the latter decreasing over time). Risk factors for perioperative complications were age, indication, diabetes, cardiac disease and contralateral occlusion. Median survival time was 10.8 years for the symptomatic and 10.2 years for the asymptomatic group. Tolerance to carotid clamping during CEA under general anaesthesia was evaluated in 62 patients measuring cerebral oximetry, transit time volume flowmetry and stump pressure. High internal carotid artery flow before clamping and low stump pressure was associated with decreased oxygenation after clamping suggesting shunt indication. In 18 patients undergoing CEA, jugular bulb blood samples demonstrated significantly altered levels of marker for inflammatory activation (IL-6) and fibrinolytic activity (D-dimer and PAI-1) during carotid clamping as compared to radial artery levels. This indicates a cerebral ischaemia due to clamping although clinically well tolerated. In conclusion, the perioperative outcome after CEA in Sweden compared well with the RCTs results. Tolerance to carotid clamping may be evaluated by combining stump pressure and volume flow measurements. Although clinically tolerated clamping may induce a cerebral ischaemic response.
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Metabolic Disturbances in Relation to Serum Calcium and Primary HyperparathyroidismHagström, Emil January 2006 (has links)
Primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT), characterized by elevated serum levels of calcium and parathyroid hormone (PTH), is associated with a number of metabolic derangements causing secondary manifestations. These include osteoporosis and increased risk of fractures, but also risk factors for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. These risk factors include impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), dyslipidemia, increased body mass index and hypertension. While the skeletal abnormalities are mainly due to elevated PTH, the latter disturbances are still unexplained. Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), IGT, dyslipidemia and hypertension are all included in the metabolic syndrome, also associated with morbidity and mortality in cardiovascular diseases. In this thesis, decreased bone mineral density (BMD) and variables of the metabolic syndrome are explored in patients with mild and normocalcemic pHPT before and after parathyroidectomy. To further investigate the relationship between insulin sensitivity and calcium, a community-based cohort was investigated. In two different patient cohorts of pHPT, lipoprotein alterations with decreased levels of HDL-cholesterol and elevated triglycerides were found in association with a high frequency of IGT, NIDDM and decreased insulin sensitivity. Parathyroidectomy had effects on the dyslipidemia and in part on the glucose metabolism. The disturbed glucose metabolism in pHPT was substantiated by results from the general population by a negative association between insulin sensitivity, measured by hyperinsulinemic clamp, and serum calcium. In conclusion, normocalcemic, mild and overt pHPT are associated with a range of risk factors for cardiovascular diseases, development of NIDDM and decreased BMD in cortical as well as trabecular bone. These findings explain, at least in part, the elevated morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular disease as well as fractures, reported in pHPT patients. Moreover, in the general population, serum calcium is associated with decreased insulin sensitivity. Parathyroidectomy has positive effects on several, but not all, of the investigated metabolic parameters.
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