George E. Battit
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by George E. Battit.
Annals of Surgery | 1984
William U. Shipley; William C. Wood; Joel E. Tepper; Andrew L. Warshaw; Erica Orlow; S.D. Kaufman; George E. Battit; George L. Nardi
Since 1978 we have used electron beam intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) to deliver higher radiation doses to pancreatic tumors than are possible with external beam techniques while minimizing the dose to the surrounding normal tissues. Twenty-nine patients with localized, unresectable, pancreatic carcinoma were treated by electron beam IORT in combination with conventional external radiation therapy (XRT). The primary tumor was located in the head of the pancreas in 20 patients, in the head and body in six patients, and in the body and tail in three. Adjuvant chemotherapy was given in 23 of the 29 patients. The last 13 patients have received misonidazole (3.5 mg/M2) just prior to IORT (20 Gy). At present 14 patients are alive and 11 are without evidence of disease from 3 to 41 months after IORT. The median survival is 16.5 months. Eight patients have failed locally in the IORT field and two others failed regionally. Twelve patients have developed distant metastases, including five who failed locally or regionally. We have seen no local recurrences in the 12 patients who have been treated with misonidazole and have completed IORT and XRT while 10 of 15 patients treated without misonidazole have recurred locally. Because of the shorter follow-up in the misonidazole group, this apparent improvement is not statistically significant. Fifteen patients (52%) have not had pain following treatment and 22 (76%) have had no upper gastrointestinal or biliary obstruction subsequent to their initial surgical bypasses and radiation treatments. Based on the good palliation generally obtained, the 16.5-month median survival, and the possible added benefit from misonidazole, we are encouraged to continue this approach.
Cancer | 1982
Leonard L. Gunderson; William U. Shipley; Herman D. Suit; Edward R. Epp; George L. Nardi; William C. Wood; Alfred M. Cohen; James H. Nelson; George E. Battit; Peter J. Biggs; Anthony H. Russell; Agnes Rockett; Dianna Clark
Intraoperative “boost” dose electron beam therapy given in combination with 4500‐5000 rad (45–50 Gray) external beam irradiation has been demonstrated as a practical therapeutic modality at the MGH. This procedure has been employed thus far in 58 patients; the results in the initial 36 are analyzed in detail in this paper. Thirty‐four of the 36 patients had locally advanced lesions—unresectable, recurrent, or residual disease. Results achieved to date are in full agreement with our expectations: high radiation doses have been delivered to the primary intra‐abdominal and pelvic tumors, excluding the sensitive structures from irradiation. This has been accomplished by a truly multidisciplinary effort comprising surgery, anesthesiology, OR nursing, administration, engineers, physicists, therapy technologists, and radiation therapists. Although follow‐up is not yet sufficient to judge ultimate efficacy, acute and chronic severe morbidity is low and local control is good. There is justified enthusiasm for continuing the procedure.
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1984
Nabil R. Fahmy; Panagiotis T. Mihelakos; George E. Battit; Demetrios G. Lappas
Hemodynamic and humoral events after intraoperative discontinuation of nitroprusside were studied in subjects without and with pretreatment with intravenous propranolol, 0.1 mg · kg−1 Nitroprusside‐induced hypotension was associated with increases in heart rate, cardiac output, plasma renin activity (PRA), and catecholamine levels; these changes were prevented by propranolol. In subjects pretreated with propranolol, dose requirements of nitroprusside for hypotension of comparable degree and duration decreased 40%. On discontinuation of nitroprusside, mean systemic pressure rose to 100.2 mm Hg—a level higher than prehypotension and awake values—because of increased systemic vascular resistance. Hemodynamic events were associated with persistent elevations of PRA and catecholamine levels. These rebound changes were maximal 15 min after nitroprusside withdrawal and returned to control levels 30 to 60 min later. Pretreatment with propranolol completely prevented rebound hemodynamic events after nitroprusside. Persistent elevations of PRA and catecholamine levels after nitroprusside action subsided were responsible for the effects of withdrawal.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1964
Lawrence D. Egbert; George E. Battit; Claude E. Welch; Marshall K. Bartlett
JAMA | 1963
Lawrence D. Egbert; George E. Battit; Herman Turndorf; and Henry K. Beecher
Anesthesiology | 1971
George E. Battit; Alisox B. Froese; Michael C. Long; Kumar Axil
Anesthesiology | 1978
Mark C. Rogers; George E. Battit; Bucknam McPeek; Donald P. Todd
Annals of Surgery | 1971
Benjamin A. Barnes; Frederick W. Ackroyd; George E. Battit; Paul A. Kantrowitz; Robert H. Schapiro; William E. Strole; Donald P. Todd; William V. Mcdermott
Anesthesiology | 2007
Sukumar P. Desai; Manisha Desai; Rosemarie Maddi; George E. Battit
Archives of Surgery | 1979
Marshall K. Bartlett; George E. Battit; Agnes Rockett; Elmer J. Perry; W. Gerald Austen