A. J. Shorthouse
Royal Hallamshire Hospital
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Featured researches published by A. J. Shorthouse.
Ejso | 1997
D.R. Chadwick; A. J. Shorthouse
Fine-wire localization biopsy is an accurate technique for diagnosis of mammographically-detected breast abnormalities, and may also be therapeutic in the management of impalpable malignant lesions. A number of factors were therefore examined regarding their influence upon therapeutic success in a consecutive series of 129 localization biopsies. Factors included type of radiological abnormality, method and accuracy of wire localization and pre-operative cytology. Primary malignancy was detected at initial localization in 64 cases (malignant:benign ratio, 1.11:1); 26 (41%) achieving adequate local tumour excision margins without further surgery, and 38 undergoing further surgery to clear margins (mastectomy in 23, further wide excision in 15). Therapeutic success was related to the accuracy of pre-operative needle localization (needle hook within 1 cm of target lesion in 26/26 (100%) therapeutic biopsies, compared to 29/38 (76%) non-therapeutic biopsies (P<0.01, Fishers exact test)); and to pre-operative cytology (suspicious/malignant cytology in 15/24 therapeutic, compared with only 9/29 non-therapeutic biopsies (P=0.013, chi-squared)). Localization biopsy has a high diagnostic success rate and a therapeutic value dependent upon accurate pre-operative cytological diagnosis, supplemented by precise needle localization of the target lesion.
Ejso | 1996
N. Oakley; A.R. Dennison; A. J. Shorthouse
The treatment options for breast cancer in elderly or unfit patients can be complicated by their coexistent medical problems. This study assesses the feasibility of simple mastectomy under local anaesthesia by means of a prospective audit on 36 patients with breast carcinoma and an ASA grade of 3 or worse. In 27 patients the tumour had escaped from tamoxifen control, no patients having had previous radiotherapy. Operation time ranged from 40 to 70 min, average blood loss was 200 ml and an average inpatient stay of 5 days. Only two patients had a resection margin less than 1 cm and in none was there significant morbidity or mortality despite the patients poor pre-operative medical condition. This confirms the potential of using local anaesthetic for simple mastectomy. Eliminating the morbidity/mortality due to general anaesthesia widens the range of treatment available (especially to medically unfit patients) giving them the option of a rapid resolution to what could be a distressing protracted condition.
Ejso | 1996
M.G. Bowditch; R. Peck; A. J. Shorthouse
Metastatic disease in the breast is uncommon t and represents less than I% of all malignant breast tumours. -3 In the majority, the diagnosis of a non-mammary primary malignancy is already known. It is unusual for a breast metastasis to be the initial presentation of malignant disease, -4 and all previously reported cases have been symptomatic in the form of a lump with skin change, nipple deformity or discharge. W~ report a case ofasymptomatic metastatic renal cell adenocarcinoma detected by mammography in the Breast Screening clinic and review the characterization of tumours presenting as metastases in the breast.
British Journal of Surgery | 1989
Wei Ming Sun; N. W. Read; T.Carmel Donnelly; J. J. Bannister; A. J. Shorthouse
British Journal of Surgery | 1992
W. M. Sun; R. J. Peck; A. J. Shorthouse; N. W. Read
British Journal of Surgery | 1990
Wei Ming Sun; N. W. Read; A. J. Shorthouse
British Journal of Surgery | 1994
W. M. Sun; N. W. Read; Panagiotis Katsinelos; T C Donnelly; A. J. Shorthouse
British Journal of Surgery | 1995
A. K. Banerjee; Ekkehard C. Jehle; A. J. Shorthouse; G. F. Buess
British Journal of Surgery | 1998
J. H. Scholefield; A. G. Johnson; A. J. Shorthouse
British Journal of Surgery | 1989
D. Whillis; J. R. Goepel; A. J. Shorthouse