130 research outputs found

    Acute Leukemia In Adults

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    The Lady and the Library Loafer: Gender and Public Space in Victorian America

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    Drill work in the correction of errors in English

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    Thesis (M.A.Ed.)--University of Kansas, Education, 1928

    The Spatial Practices of Privilege

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    The Spatial Practices of Privilege focuses on the children\u27s cottage that stands on the grounds of the Breakers, in Newport, Rhode Island. Designed by Peabody and Stearns in 1886, the cottage was the first of several changes Cornelius Vanderbilt made to the property after he purchased it in 1885. While the main house (designed by Richard Morris Hunt after the first Breakers burned in 1892) has long been interpreted as the architectural reflection of the Vanderbilts\u27 class status, the cottage has been ignored. Bringing together the methodologies of cultural landscape studies, performance theory, and the history of childhood, Abigail A. Van Slyck argues that the estate played an active role in establishing, maintaining, and enhancing the family\u27s class status, and that children - and their spatial management - were integral to the process. In its form and content, the cottage evoked middle-class domesticity, but did so in the service of an upper-class identity that sought to distinguish itself from the middle class. Ostensibly a site of play, it was also a place of work, both for the Vanderbilts\u27 servants as well as for the Vanderbilt offspring. Modeled on an almshouse and devoted to the homely skills of cooking and sewing, the building made claims to humbleness that were refuted by its size, expense, and its spatial arrangements that supported the Vanderbilt children and their parents in the performance of their privileged status

    Supportive Care of the Leukemic Patient

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    The outlook for the patient with leukemia or lymphoma has been improved by the exponential expansion of basic scientific knowledge in physical chemistry and microbiology, added to much new clinical information based on large cooperative group studies. Most of this progress derives, not from a specific treatment for the disease, but from better understanding and use of multiple support measures. These include the availability of blood components, such as red blood cell, platelet and granulocyte concentrates, better protective isolation measures, and greater expertise in the recognition and treatment of bacterial, fungal, and viral infections in immunosuppressed patients. In addition, the management of associated metabolic disturbances, such as hyperkalemia, hyperuricemia, and hypercalcemia, is now based on firm ground. A review of the major progress In these various areas of supportive care comprises this essay

    Kid Size: The Material World of Childhood : An Exhibition Review

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    Long-term survival after onset of blast crisis in chronic granulocytic leukemia: Case report and therapeutic considerations

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    Current analysis indicates a median survival of 3.6 months in 356 cases of chronic granulocytic leukemia after onset of blast transformation. Thirty-five (10.0%) complete remissions (CR), all of short duration, were observed. Closer scrutiny of the reported clinical experience offers clues for improving this poor outlook. A 76% CR rate can be extracted from this total experience by identifying cases treated with cytoslne arabinoside combined with one or more other agents. In isolated reports, weekly vincristine and prednisone have yielded good remission rates. Two general morphologic types of blasts can be distinguished by cytochemical stains and other features: lymphoid and nonlymphoid (myeloid, monocytoid). We suggest that the lymphoid type of blast crisis Is more responsive to vincristine-prednisone, whereas combination chemotherapy, containing cytoslne arabinoside, is more effective in nonlymphoid crises. We report a blast crisis in which two CRs occurred. The patient survived 19 months after onset, possibly because he also received BCC

    Skin Lesions Associated with E. Coli Sepsis in a Patient with Acute Leukemia

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    The clinical course of a patient with acute leukemia and metastatic intradermal abscesses secondary to Escherichia coli sepsis is described. E. coli organisms, cultured first from the blood and later from the lesions, had an identical antibiotic susceptibility and biotyping profile. This complication has not been previously described. Granulocytopenia and varicose veins may have been critical predisposing factors. With more widespread use of progressive immunosuppressive regimens, unusual manifestations of common infections will be recognized more frequently
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