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Institution

Leicester Royal Infirmary

HealthcareLeicester, United Kingdom
About: Leicester Royal Infirmary is a healthcare organization based out in Leicester, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Carotid endarterectomy. The organization has 5300 authors who have published 6204 publications receiving 208464 citations.


Papers
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Journal Article
TL;DR: This paper reviews the use of magnetic resonance diffusion imaging in studies of multiple sclerosis and the concept of diffusion tensor imaging is introduced and images obtained using this method are presented.
Abstract: This paper reviews the use of magnetic resonance diffusion imaging in studies of multiple sclerosis. Firstly, the principles of diffusion imaging are explained together with a discussion of the hardware and techniques required. The concept of diffusion tensor imaging is introduced and images obtained using this method are presented. Studies that have used diffusion imaging in patients with multiple sclerosis and the implications of the results are discussed. There is an increase in the diffusion coefficient of water molecules in the plaques of patients with multiple sclerosis, compared with healthy brain. Some workers also report increased diffusion in the normal appearing white matter of some patients with multiple sclerosis. Possible mechanisms are given for these findings, together with the experimental evidence to support them.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Observational data suggest that progesterone influences tumor growth, and a progestersone antagonist such as mifepristone therefore may inhibit tumor growth.
Abstract: Meningiomas are slow-growing benign brain tumors. The etiology of meningioma is largely unknown, and exposure to high-dose ionizing radiation and coexistence with certain rare genetic conditions explain only a small fraction of the incidence of the disease. The evidence that implicates gender-specific hormones in the pathogenesis of meningioma emanates from data showing increased growth of meningiomas during pregnancy and change in size during menses. Observational data have identified the menopause and oophorectomy as conferring protection against the risk of developing meningiomas, while adiposity is positively associated with the disease. These tumors are also positively associated with breast cancer, although they express a different gonadal steroid receptor repertoire. About 70% of meningiomas express progesterone receptors, while fewer than 31% express estrogen receptors. These observations suggest that progesterone influences tumor growth. A progesterone antagonist such as mifepristone therefore may inhibit tumor growth. The use of hormone replacement therapy in symptomatic postmenopausal women either with previously treated disease or with dormant tumors is discussed, but remains controversial.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The case notes of patients presenting to six dermatology units in the U.K. were reviewed to clarify the association with malignancy and determine the common clinical features of Sweet's syndrome.
Abstract: Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome) is reported to be a marker for underlying malignancy. Much of the evidence for this is based on case reports, small series of cases and reviews of the literature. In order to clarify the association with malignancy and determine the common clinical features of Sweet's syndrome, we reviewed the case notes of patients presenting to six dermatology units in the U.K. Eighty-seven cases of histologically proven Sweet's syndrome were reviewed. Fourteen patients (16%) developed associated malignancy, predominantly haematological, two patients (2%) had a history of previous malignancy and four patients (5%) had premalignant conditions (monoclonal gammopathy, two: myelodysplasia, two). Malignancy developed up to a year after presentation with Sweet's syndrome. Patients with associated malignancy were more likely to be anaemic (P < 0.01) at presentation, had a lower mean platelet count (207 x 10(9)/L vs. 332 x 10(9)/L; P < 0.003) and were, on average, older (59 years vs. 49 years; P = 0.002). Contrary to previous reports, a greater percentage of females developed malignancy than males.

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Treatment was refined successfully for stage I and II FH patients and the outlook for the majority of children with Wilms’ tumour is now excellent, whilst that for patients with anaplastic or rhabdoid variants remains poor.
Abstract: The aims of the UKW2 study were: (1) to further refine treatment for stage I and II favourable histology (FH) patients; (2) to consolidate the UKW1 results for stage III FH patients; (3) to improve the outlook for patients with inoperable primary tumours and those patients with stage IV and unfavourable histology disease Treatment consisted of primary nephrectomy, wherever possible, followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy, as dictated by stage and histology Treatment was refined successfully for stage I and II FH patients The 4-year event-free survival for these two groups was 94% and 91%, respectively Stage III FH patients had a 4-year event free survival of 84% The outlook for patients with clear cell sarcoma of the kidney is as good as for patients with favourable histology, whilst that for patients with anaplastic or rhabdoid variants remains poor The outlook for the majority of children with Wilms' tumour is now excellent

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that all patients with ampullary tumours should have endoscopic biopsy followed by ED; Whipple's resection remains the surgical treatment of choice.
Abstract: The results of treatment and outcome in 52 consecutive patients presenting to Leicester from 1972 to 1984 are presented. The number of patients diagnosed increased from two per year before the introduction of duodenoscopy to nearly five per year afterwards. Endoscopic drainage (ED) was attempted in 21 patients with a success rate of 81 per cent. In eight cases ED was used pre-operatively and in the remainder as definitive treatment. Twenty-four patients had a Whipple's resection (12.5 per cent mortality), four patients had a local resection (no deaths), ten patients had surgical bypass (60 per cent mortality) and thirteen patients had ED alone (23 per cent mortality). The major risk factor score was significantly greater in patients undergoing surgical bypass compared with Whipple's resection. Age and risk factor scores were significantly greater in patients who had ED drainage alone than in surgical patients. The 5 year survival rate for resection was 56 per cent versus 13 per cent for drainage procedures (P less than 0.001). Survival in resection cases was directly related to the degree of tumour differentiation and a new staging system. It is proposed that all patients with ampullary tumours should have endoscopic biopsy followed by ED; Whipple's resection remains the surgical treatment of choice.

106 citations


Authors

Showing all 5314 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
George Davey Smith2242540248373
Nilesh J. Samani149779113545
Peter M. Rothwell13477967382
John F. Thompson132142095894
James A. Russell124102487929
Paul Bebbington11958346341
John P. Neoptolemos11264852928
Richard C. Trembath10736841128
Andrew J. Wardlaw9231133721
Melanie J. Davies8981436939
Philip Quirke8937834071
Kenneth J. O'Byrne8762939193
David R. Jones8770740501
Keith R. Abrams8635530980
Martin J. S. Dyer8537324909
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20234
202219
2021168
2020120
2019110
2018121