32 research outputs found
Feasibility report of conservative surgery, perioperative high-dose-rate brachytherapy (PHDRB), and low-to-moderate dose external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) in pediatric sarcomas
This study was undertaken to determine the feasibility of perioperative
high-dose-rate brachytherapy (PHDRB) as an accelerated boost in patients with
pediatric sarcomas. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Five pediatric patients (ages 7-16)
with soft tissue sarcomas (STS) or soft tissue recurrences of previously treated
osteosarcomas were treated with surgical resection and PHDRB (16-24 Gy) for R0-R1
resections. Patients with STS and osteosarcomas received 27 Gy and 45 Gy of EBRT
postoperatively. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 27 months (range, 12-50)
all the patients remain locally controlled. Only 1 patient developed regrowth of
pulmonary metastases and died of distant disease at 16 months. CONCLUSIONS: The
use of PHDRB is safe in the short-term in this pediatric population. Only 1
patient suffered a partial wound dehiscence that may not be entirely related to
PHDRB. Patients with recurrent osteosarcomas can be treated in a fashion similar
to their adult soft tissue counterparts and avoid limb amputation. Younger
patients with STS may achieve local control and prevent growth retardation with a
combination of PHDRB and moderate doses of EBR
Howard's War on Terror: A Conceivable, Communicable and Coercive Foreign Policy Discourse
This article explores the relationship between language and political possibility. It is argued that John Howardâs language from 11 September 2001 to mid 2003 helped to enable the âWar on Terrorâ in an Australian context in three principal ways. Firstly, through contingent and contestable constructions of Australia, the world and their relationship, Howardâs language made interventionism conceivable. Secondly, emphasising shared values, mateship and mutual sacrifice in war, Howard embedded his foreign policy discourse in the cultural terrain of âmainstream Australiaâ, specifically framing a foreign policy discourse that was communicable to âbattlersâ and disillusioned âHansonitesâ. Thirdly, positioning alternatives as âun-Australianâ, Howardâs language was particularly coercive, silencing potential oppositional voices
Foreign policy and political possibility
This article explores the relationship between foreign policy and political possibility in two parts. First, the relationship between foreign policy and political possibility is theorized around three analytical moments: political possibility is linked to the framing of conceivable, communicable and coercive foreign policy. Second, this framework is developed and demonstrated through a brief analysis of Coalition foreign policy in the War on Terror, considering American, British and Australian foreign policy between 2001 and 2003. This analysis dissects distinct and divergent Coalition foreign policies through a linked three-part conceptualization of political possibility. It enables an understanding of how the War on Terror was rendered possible through the construction of foreign policy in thinkable, resonant and ultimately dominant terms. The article concludes by looking to the wider analytical applicability of this particular theorization of the relationship between foreign policy and political possibility
Factor von Willebrand como intermediario entre la hemostasia y la angiogénesis de origen tumoral
Cancer patients often show an imbalance condition between coagulation system and fibrinolysis which causes a prothrombotic state. Different molecular factors like von Willebrand factor (vWf), presenting higher plasmatic rates in these patients, play an important role in this situation. During active angiogenesis taking place in tumor growth, the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and the fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2) contribute to the proliferation and differentiation of endothelial tissue, the main vWf producer, promoting increased rates of vWf in the serum of neoplastic patients. Recently vWf's contribution to tumor cells and platelet adhesion has been described. In this process, the discovery of platelet, endothelial and tumor cell membrane integrins and their implication in cellular adhesion has represented a major step in demonstrating how blood clotting and platelet aggregation are mediated by tumor cell and platelet linkage. Migration properties acquired by tumor cells as a result of this binding have been also pointed out. Clinical trials show higher rates of plasmatic vWf in cancer patients the more advanced clinical and radiological stage they present (metastasic versus localized). Moreover, higher pre-surgical serum vWf rates in patients can be used to predict poorer survival after resection surgery. vWf high molecular weight multimers have been also related to a cleavage protease deficiency in the serum of the oncologic population. The promising results of antiaggregation/anticoagulation therapies in these patients permit us to envisage new therapeutic target
Merinos, myths and Macarthurs : Australian graziers and their sheep, 1788-1900
Sheep and their wool, the strong backbone that helped colonial Australia walk upright, have a proud place in Australian hearts and in the national record. But the romance of wool has often shrouded the hard facts, and the myths developed by and around the pioneers have distorted an important story. John Garran, sheep-breeder and historian, was convinced that the history written from the study chair be corrected from the farm. He brought a critical eye, practical experience and a great interest in genetics to tracing the origins and development of sheep in Australia. This approach was complemented by the political economist Leslie White. The particular focus of myth has been John Macarthur and the purity of the Merino breed. Australians have been taught that their nation has ridden to prosperity on the sheep's back, and that early sheep-breeders made a unique contribution in developing a pure breed - beliefs aired in controversies about the export of Merinos. But the earliest sheep in Australia were hairy sheep from the Cape of Good Hope and Bengal which had with an undercoat of fine wool, and these provided the base from which, by cross-breeding with Saxon Merinos and other breeds, the Australian Merino became so successful. It is generally, but wrongly, assumed that all Macarthur's stud sheep were pure bred, unmixed descendants of Spanish Merinos he obtained from King George III. Macarthur has been credited with having a vision of a great Australian industry, and working untiringly to establish it on a permanent basis, and has gained a carefully fostered but unmerited reputation as a scientific breeder, a knowledgeable grazier and a producer of superior sheep. None of these assumptions is tenable, and Merinos, Myths and Macarthurs demolishes once and for all the claims by Macarthur and later advocates to his being the father of the wool industry in Australia. What is more, it was his wife Elizabeth who carried the burden of his sheep enterprise. Macarthur at last is shorn
Feasibility report of conservative surgery, perioperative high-dose-rate brachytherapy (PHDRB), and low-to-moderate dose external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) in pediatric sarcomas
This study was undertaken to determine the feasibility of perioperative
high-dose-rate brachytherapy (PHDRB) as an accelerated boost in patients with
pediatric sarcomas. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Five pediatric patients (ages 7-16)
with soft tissue sarcomas (STS) or soft tissue recurrences of previously treated
osteosarcomas were treated with surgical resection and PHDRB (16-24 Gy) for R0-R1
resections. Patients with STS and osteosarcomas received 27 Gy and 45 Gy of EBRT
postoperatively. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 27 months (range, 12-50)
all the patients remain locally controlled. Only 1 patient developed regrowth of
pulmonary metastases and died of distant disease at 16 months. CONCLUSIONS: The
use of PHDRB is safe in the short-term in this pediatric population. Only 1
patient suffered a partial wound dehiscence that may not be entirely related to
PHDRB. Patients with recurrent osteosarcomas can be treated in a fashion similar
to their adult soft tissue counterparts and avoid limb amputation. Younger
patients with STS may achieve local control and prevent growth retardation with a
combination of PHDRB and moderate doses of EBR