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Dive into the research topics where Jan Pitha is active.

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Featured researches published by Jan Pitha.


Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2005

Comparison of Cryothermia and Radiofrequency Current in Safety and Efficacy of Catheter Ablation within the Canine Coronary Sinus Close to the Left Circumflex Coronary Artery

Hiroshi Aoyama; Hiroshi Nakagawa; Jan Pitha; George S. Khammar; Krishnaswamy Chandrasekaran; Kagari Matsudaira; Tetsuo Yagi; Katsuaki Yokoyama; Ralph Lazzara; Warren M. Jackman

Introduction: A canine model was used to compare cryoablation and radiofrequency ablation (RFA) within the coronary sinus (CS) in the ability to create a transmural CS myocardial (Trans‐CSM) lesion and risk of coronary artery stenosis.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 1986

Muir-Torre syndrome: histologic spectrum of sebaceous proliferations

Walter H. C. Burgdorf; Jan Pitha; Aly Fahmy

The sebaceous proliferations seen in patients with Muir-Torre syndrome are unique and difficult to classify. Having reviewed over 50 skin biopsies from five patients with Muir-Torre syndrome, we conclude that the primary proliferation involves the hair follicle and most often resembles either a keratoacanthoma or a sebaceous proliferation, but may have histologic features of both lesions. Unusual patterns seen in the sebaceous components may include solid basaloid sheets, mucinous areas, and convoluted glands.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 1998

Fibronectin and the extracellular matrix in the perforating disorders of the skin.

Michael B. Morgan; Charlotte A. Truitt; James W. Taira; Stephen C. Somach; Jan Pitha; Mark Allen Everett

Despite detailed microscopic descriptions and clinical observation, little is known regarding the pathogenesis of the perforating disorders of skin, which have traditionally been subdivided into numerous microscopic entities associated with various clinical settings. An increasing body of evidence now suggests that the perforating disorders of skin are akin, and may constitute an expanded single pathologic entity. Each of the classic perforating disorders of skin, including elastosis perforans serpiginosa, perforating folliculitis, reactive perforating collagenosis, Kyrles disease, and perforating disorder of uremia, have been shown to extrude collagen, elastin, and related extracellular matrix components through the epidermis. Considering a shared pathogenic mechanism among these entities, we explored the possible role of the extracellular matrix, in particular fibronectin, in perforating disorders of skin. Using immunohistochemical and serum determinations of extracellular matrix constituents, including fibronectin, collagen type IV, laminin, and tenascin, we showed consistent serum elevation and/or deposition of fibronectin, in each case, without a commensurate increase in laminin, collagen type IV, and tenascin. We propose that elevated serum and tissue concentrations of fibronectin may be responsible for inciting, in a physiologically aberrant manner, increased epithelial migration and proliferation culminating in perforation.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 1998

Ocular adnexal oncocytoma : A case series and clinicopathologic review of the literature

Michael B. Morgan; Charlotte A. Truitt; Craig Romer; Stephen C. Somach; Jan Pitha

The authors report the clinical, microscopic, and ultrastructural features of four oncocytic lesions involving the ocular adnexa. Three of the lesions originated in the ocular caruncle of elderly women, and a single case was encountered from the medial eyelid of an elderly man. Each lesion clinically presented as a slow-growing, painless, red mass. The histopathologic features were distinctive, with polyhedral cells containing granular eosinophilic cytoplasm found to consist of large numbers of mitochondria on ultrastructural examination. Of the 40 cases previously reported primarily in the ophthalmologic literature, the cases reported here similarly involved the eyelid and associated ocular adnexa with a predilection for elderly women. Oncocytomas probably represent an age-associated metaplastic and neoplastic transformation of the glandular epithelium comprising the ducts of salivary glands.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 1997

Angiomatoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma revisited. An immunohistochemical and DNA ploidy analysis.

Michael B. Morgan; Jan Pitha; Sarah Johnson; Bruce Dunn; Mark Allen Everett

A histologic, immunohistochemical, and DNA ploidy analyses were performed on two cases of angiomatoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma to ascertain the histogenesis and relationship of endothelial, histiocytic, and fibroblastic elements. Both cases were slowly growing, grossly encapsulated. Subcutaneous masses resected from pediatric patients. Microscopically, the tumors were composed of solid masses of epithelioid and spindle cells with abnormal endothelial-lined and blood-filled cystic spaces surrounded by normal vascular structures and aggregates of lymphocytes occasionally forming germinal follicles. The tumor cells stained exclusively with CD34 and vimentin antibodies. Tumor-associated vessels stained for CD31, CD34, vimentin, and Ulex europaeus. Occasional cells within germinal follicles stained for lysozyme, CD68, and HAM56. Ploidy analysis of tumor cells showed intermediate aneuploidy with a DNA index of 1.14. Blood vessels within and surrounding the tumor as well as inflammatory cells were DNA euploid. These studies suggest that the tumor--though comprised of histologically and immunohistochemically benign-appearing euploid endothelial, fibroblastic, and inflammatory elements--contains an aneuploid population of undifferentiated mesenchymal cells.


Toxicology and Industrial Health | 1987

Occupational Hydrocarbon Exposure and Renal Histopathology

Jan Pitha; George P. Hemstreet; Nabih R. Asal; Robert L. Petrone; Benjamin F. Trump; Fred G. Silva

A blinded, retrospective study of histological sections from ten hydrocarbon-exposed and twenty unexposed nephrectomized renal cell carcinoma cases was conducted to evaluate the histopathologic features present in the apparently normal kidney parenchyma removed with the tumor. Tissue sections from each of the thirty cases were independently reviewed by three consulting pathologists and scored using well defined criteria. Occupational hydrocarbon exposure indices were developed by a team of industrial hygienists and applied to the detailed occupational history of each exposed case. A positive correlation was observed between age and the total renal pathology score (r s = .40, p < .03). No correlation was found between indices of occupational hydrocarbon exposure and renal pathology scores among exposed cases. No significant differences in renal pathology scores were noted when exposed cases were matched to unexposed cases by age, sex, and race. These results are limited by the inclusion of only cases with historical hydrocarbon exposures. It is recommended that a follow-up study be conducted, utilizing sensitive quantitative methods, to define what, if any, cytopathologic renal effects occur in conjunction with current occupational exposures to hydrocarbons.


Urology | 1979

Adenocarcinoma of rete testis

Johnny B. Roy; Walter E. Baumann; Terry M. Lewis; Aly Fahmy; Jan Pitha

Adenocarcinoma of the rete testis is a rare tumor of the genital tract. An advanced case of adenocarcinoma thought to arise from the rete testis is presented. We believe this is the eighteenth reported case.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 2016

Syringocystadenocarcinoma Papilliferum In Situ-Like Changes in Extramammary Paget Disease: A Report of 11 Cases

Anastasia M. Konstantinova; Denisa Kacerovska; Colin J.R. Stewart; Szépe P; Jan Pitha; Miroslav Šulc; Vladimir Bencik; Michal Michal; Barbara Shideler; Katrin Kerl; Dmitry V. Kazakov

Abstract:The authors report 11 cases of extramammary Paget disease (EMPD), all of which also demonstrated a combination of histological changes highly reminiscent of syringocystadenocarcinoma papilliferum in situ. In addition to the classical features of EMPD, characterized by the intraepidermal spread of individually dispersed neoplastic cells with ample cytoplasm, many of which contained mucin, there were areas of acanthosis with the substitution of spinous layer keratinocytes by neoplastic cells, whereas the native basal cell layer was intact. In addition to acanthosis (and sometimes papillomatosis), the dermal papillae showed a prominent infiltrate of plasma cells, completing the resemblance to syringocystadenocarcinoma papilliferum in situ; this similarity was further enhanced in 2 cases, which showed conspicuous gland formation. One additional case showed multifocal dermal proliferations compatible with eccrine syringofibroadenoma (syringofibroadenomatous hyperplasia). The changes described herein seem to be relatively rare in EMPD, and they can represent a diagnostic pitfall, as evidenced by 2 cases that were originally misinterpreted as syringocystadenocarcinoma papilliferum in situ. Clinically, these microscopic changes sometimes corresponded to nodular lesions, which were specifically noted to have a papillated erosive surface.


Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 1985

Amorphous water-soluble derivatives of cyclodextrins: nontoxic dissolution enhancing excipients

Josef Pitha; Jan Pitha


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 1979

Incidence and Growth of Mammary Tumors Induced by 7, 12-Dimethylbenz[a]anthracene as Related to the Dietary Content of Fat and Antioxidant

M. Margaret King; David M. Bailey; Donald D. Gibson; Jan Pitha; Paul B. McCay

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Michael B. Morgan

University of South Florida

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Aly Fahmy

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Josef Pitha

National Institutes of Health

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M. Margaret King

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Paul B. McCay

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Sarah Brown

University of Oklahoma

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