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14
result(s) for
"Deutsch, Peter George"
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Invasive and Non-Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis—A Review and Update of the Evidence
by
Prasad, Shashi
,
Deutsch, Peter George
,
Whittaker, Joshua
in
allergy
,
Antifungal Agents - therapeutic use
,
fungal
2019
Fungal infections are a subset of infectious processes that an otolaryngologist is required to be familiar with. They can be encountered in otology, rhinology and head and neck surgery. The presence of fungal rhinosinusitis is well recognised by otolaryngologists, but the classifications and appropriate management are not so well understood. The prevalence of fungal sinus disease is thought to be have been increasing in recent decades There is speculation that this may be due to increased awareness, antibiotic overuse and increased use of immunosuppressant medications. Added to this, there has been a large amount published on the role of fungi as a causative organism in chronic rhinosinusitis. Given the importance of fungal rhinosinusitis in clinical practice, we aim to review the classification and current management strategies based on up-to-date literature.
Journal Article
Epirubicin extravasation: consequences of delayed management
2017
Epirubicin is an anthracycline chemotherapy agent used for treatment of several cancers including oesophageal, breast and gastric. Extravasation is a well-recognised and serious complication of any intravenous therapies but especially chemotherapeutic agents. Signs of the injury can be subtle and without prompt recognition and treatment there can be extensive tissue damage and depending on location of injury this can result in significant functional loss. In this article, a case of delayed management of epirubicin extravasation from a cannula situated at the dorsum of the hand is discussed. Successful surgical reconstruction of the resulting substantial tissue damage using a radial forearm flap 21 days following injury is described.
Journal Article
Laryngeal lipoma: a rare cause of acute intermittent airway obstruction
by
O'Connell, Janet
,
Deutsch, Peter George
in
51-70 years
,
Airway management
,
Airway Obstruction - diagnosis
2016
We present a case of a 62-year-old man with a lipoma in the exceedingly rare location of the larynx, causing intermittent airway obstruction and dysphagia. The lipoma was excised endoscopically with complete resolution of symptoms. Lipomas are relatively common, accounting for 4–5% of all benign tumours in the body. They traditionally occur in areas of large depositions of subcutaneous fat, most frequently the trunk and limbs. They are recognised to occur in the head and neck but these only represent 13–15% of all lipomas. Lipomas are typically asymptomatic unless their impingement of nearby structures causes symptoms.
Journal Article
Tortuous internal carotid artery: an important differential of the pulsatile oropharyngeal mass
by
Deutsch, Peter George
,
Watts, Emma
,
Pipe, Michelle
in
Aged
,
Anatomic Variation
,
Carotid arteries
2020
On examination, a longitudinal, pulsatile lesion in the right posterolateral pharyngeal wall commenced at the junction of the oropharynx and nasopharynx, and progressed to the vallecular. Rarely, patients may present with temporary blindness, objective tinnitus,6 7 pharyngitis8 or neck mass.8 A tortuous ICA is an important differential diagnosis in suspected peritonsillar abscess and parapharyngeal neoplasm due to the necessity for fine needle aspiration or biopsy and the associated risk of major haemorrhage. Some cases report alterations in the ICA found during surgical procedures and careful adaptations which have subsequently been made during the surgery.6 In one case, an ICA was detected 1 cm to the left of the tonsils during tonsillectomy; this highlights the tangible risks to these patients.6 Further, research shows tortuosity of the ICA as a risk factor for cerebral ischaemic stroke.9 Risks of carotid tortuosity should be considered prior to neurosurgery, as detailed by Brachlow et al,10 following the death of a 30-year-old man who underwent cerebral ischaemia and brain death following rotation of the head for surgical positioning. Curving and looping of the internal carotid artery in relation to the pharynx: frequency, embryology and clinical implications.
Journal Article
ALYREF, a novel factor involved in breast carcinogenesis, acts through transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms selectively regulating the short NEAT1 isoform
2022
The RNA-binding protein ALYREF (THOC4) is involved in transcriptional regulation and nuclear mRNA export, though its role and molecular mode of action in breast carcinogenesis are completely unknown. Here, we identified high ALYREF expression as a factor for poor survival in breast cancer patients. ALYREF significantly influenced cellular growth, apoptosis and mitochondrial energy metabolism in breast cancer cells as well as breast tumorigenesis in orthotopic mouse models. Transcriptional profiling, phenocopy and rescue experiments identified the short isoform of the lncRNA
NEAT1
as a molecular trigger for ALYREF effects in breast cancer. Mechanistically, we found that ALYREF binds to the
NEAT1
promoter region to enhance the global
NEAT1
transcriptional activity. Importantly, by stabilizing CPSF6, a protein that selectively activates the post-transcriptional generation of the short isoform of
NEAT1
, as well as by direct binding and stabilization of the short isoform of
NEAT1,
ALYREF selectively fine-tunes the expression of the short
NEAT1
isoform. Overall, our study describes ALYREF as a novel factor contributing to breast carcinogenesis and identifies novel molecular mechanisms of regulation the two isoforms of
NEAT1
.
Journal Article
Road will ruin Serengeti
2010
Tanzania's iconic national park must not be divided by a highway, say Andrew Dobson, Markus Borner, Tony Sinclair and 24 others. A route farther south would bring greater benefits to development and the environment.
Journal Article
Absence of Duplication of Chromosome 21 Genes in Familial and Sporadic Alzheimer's Disease
by
Bodfish, James W.
,
Tanzi, Rudolph E.
,
Drachman, David
in
Alleles
,
Alzheimer Disease - genetics
,
Alzheimer's disease
1987
The possibility that Alzheimer's disease (AD) is caused by overexpression or duplication of one or more genes on chromosome 21 has been raised by the observation of AD-like neuropathologic changes in individuals with Down syndrome and by the mapping of both the defect for familial AD and the amyloid β protein gene to this autosome. Possible duplication on chromosome 21 was investigated in both familial and sporadic AD by means of restriction fragment length polymorphisms for the amyloid and SODI loci, as well as for DNA markers in the vicinity of the familial AD defect and in the critical Down syndrome region of chromosome 21. No evidence of increased DNA dosage was observed in either brain or leukocytes of patients with inherited or sporadic forms of AD. Duplication of these regions is therefore not a frequent event in either form of AD. Furthermore, no significant allelic association was detected between AD and any of the loci, including the amyloid and SODI genes, providing no support for the hypothesis that defects in these specific genes are the primary cause of AD.
Journal Article
The Brain Tumor Segmentation (BraTS) Challenge 2023: Focus on Pediatrics (CBTN-CONNECT-DIPGR-ASNR-MICCAI BraTS-PEDs)
2023
Pediatric tumors of the central nervous system are the most common cause of cancer-related death in children. The five-year survival rate for high-grade gliomas in children is less than 20\\%. Due to their rarity, the diagnosis of these entities is often delayed, their treatment is mainly based on historic treatment concepts, and clinical trials require multi-institutional collaborations. The MICCAI Brain Tumor Segmentation (BraTS) Challenge is a landmark community benchmark event with a successful history of 12 years of resource creation for the segmentation and analysis of adult glioma. Here we present the CBTN-CONNECT-DIPGR-ASNR-MICCAI BraTS-PEDs 2023 challenge, which represents the first BraTS challenge focused on pediatric brain tumors with data acquired across multiple international consortia dedicated to pediatric neuro-oncology and clinical trials. The BraTS-PEDs 2023 challenge focuses on benchmarking the development of volumentric segmentation algorithms for pediatric brain glioma through standardized quantitative performance evaluation metrics utilized across the BraTS 2023 cluster of challenges. Models gaining knowledge from the BraTS-PEDs multi-parametric structural MRI (mpMRI) training data will be evaluated on separate validation and unseen test mpMRI dataof high-grade pediatric glioma. The CBTN-CONNECT-DIPGR-ASNR-MICCAI BraTS-PEDs 2023 challenge brings together clinicians and AI/imaging scientists to lead to faster development of automated segmentation techniques that could benefit clinical trials, and ultimately the care of children with brain tumors.
Journal Article
The Linked Data Benchmark Council (LDBC): Driving competition and collaboration in the graph data management space
2024
Graph data management is instrumental for several use cases such as recommendation, root cause analysis, financial fraud detection, and enterprise knowledge representation. Efficiently supporting these use cases yields a number of unique requirements, including the need for a concise query language and graph-aware query optimization techniques. The goal of the Linked Data Benchmark Council (LDBC) is to design a set of standard benchmarks that capture representative categories of graph data management problems, making the performance of systems comparable and facilitating competition among vendors. LDBC also conducts research on graph schemas and graph query languages. This paper introduces the LDBC organization and its work over the last decade.