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Dive into the research topics where Jaroslaw Muz is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaroslaw Muz.


American Heart Journal | 1982

Value of positive myocardial technetium-99m-pyrophosphate scintigraphy in the noninvasive diagnosis of cardiac amyloidosis

Theodore A. Wizenberg; Jaroslaw Muz; Young H. Sohn; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Arnold M. Weissler

Ten consecutive patients with tissue-proven amyloidosis, seven of whom presented with congestive heart failure, were found to exhibit intense diffuse uptake of technetium-99m-pyrophosphate (Tc-99m-PYP) on cardiac radionuclide imaging. The patients exhibited echocardiographic and systolic time interval abnormalities suggesting combined restrictive and congestive cardiomyopathic changes. On M-mode echocardiograms, there was symmetrically increased thickness of the interventricular septum and left ventricular (LV) posterior wall in diastole (10 of 10), decreased fractional shortening of the LV minor axis diameter in systole (eight of nine), and decreased percent thickening of the LV minor axis diameter in systole (eight of nine) and LV posterior wall (10 of 10) in systole. Three patients demonstrated enlarged LV end-diastolic diameter. All 10 patients had abnormal PEP/LVET and eight had shortened LVETI. When combined with noninvasive tests of LV performance, positive myocardial pyrophosphate (PYP) scanning provides a new and useful adjunct in the diagnosis of amyloid heart disease.


Dysphagia | 1996

Normal adult swallowing of liquid and viscous material: scintigraphic data on bolus transit and oropharyngeal residues.

Sandra Hamlet; Jinho Choi; Michele M. Zormeier; Falah Shamsa; Robert J. Stachler; Jaroslaw Muz; Lewis Jones

Scintigraphic data are provided for 20 normal control subjects, 39–65 years of age. Each subject swallowed 10 cc of water and 10 cc of a more viscous material (1,100 centipoise) consisting of apple juice thickened with Thick-It, a commercial food thickener. The test substances were combined with 2.5 mCi Tc-99m sulfur colloid. Scintigraphic data were acquired in dynamic mode for 10 sec at 25 frames/sec as the subjects swallowed. Time-activity (TA) data were used to compute transit times, percentage residues in the mouth and pharynx, percent ingested, and a derived swallow efficiency score. The liquid was ingested in a single swallow by all subjects, and 9 cc was actually tranferred to the esophagus. In contrast, for the viscous material, 11/20 subjects performed a second clearing swallow within the 10-sec interval. On the first swallow with the viscous substance, an average of 7 cc was transferred to the esophagus. Scintigraphy offers an excellent technique for determining natural and preferred volumes for swallowing a variety of bolus consistencies, since it can quantify the volume of each swallow or partial swallow. In this group of subjects the oral discharge time was shorter with the viscous material than with the water, but the pharyngeal transit times were not significantly different for the two bolus consistencies. Numerical efficiency scores were lower for the viscous material, indicating that such a measure is bolus dependent.


American Journal of Otolaryngology | 1989

Aspiration in patients with head and neck cancer and tracheostomy

Jaroslaw Muz; Robert H. Mathog; Richard Nelson; Lewis Jones

Tracheopulmonary aspiration is a common occurrence in patients with dysphagia associated with head and neck cancer. We performed quantitative scintigraphic analysis of tracheopulmonary aspiration in 125 patients with head and neck cancer; 58 of these patients had a tracheostomy. Tracheopulmonary aspiration occurred in 58% of patients with a tracheostomy and in 23% of patients without a tracheostomy. In six of seven patients with a tracheostomy, tracheopulmonary aspiration significantly increased when the obturator was removed and, in these patients, occlusion of the tracheostomy tube during feedings eliminated or reduced the complication. Our studies suggest that aspiration can be monitored accurately and conveniently by scintigraphy, and that this technique is useful in the evaluation and management of dysphagia in debilitated patients.


Laryngoscope | 1987

Detection and quantification of laryngotracheopulmonary aspiration with scintigraphy

Jaroslaw Muz; Robert H. Mathog; Peter R. Miller; Robert Rosen; George O. Borrero

Aspiration is analyzed by a new scintigraphic technique and standard videofluoroscopy in 78 patients with head and neck pathology and neurologic disorders. When both methods are compared to clinical aspiration and a positive x‐ray film of pneumonia, they appear to complement each other and provide a very accurate evaluation. Scintigraphy is a more sensitive method for detecting aspiration below the vocal cords and also provides for flow dynamics and a method of quantifying the amount of aspirated material. Videofluoroscopy shows more clearly the mechanism of the swallowing disorder and how the bolus enters the tracheobronchial tree. Studies in patients following head and neck surgery demonstrate a high incidence of dysphagia, aspiration, and pneumonia.


Dysphagia | 1989

Pharyngeal transit time: Assessment with videofluoroscopic and scintigraphic techniques

Sandra Hamlet; Jaroslaw Muz; Robin Patterson; Lewis Jones

The swallowing function of 31 normal and dysphagic subjects between the ages of 39 and 79 was tested with both videofluoroscopy and scintigraphy. Pharyngeal transit times for the pair of tests were compared. A statistically significant correlation of 0.66 was found. Normal pharyngeal transit time was under 1.2 s with either method, but mean values for scintigraphy were slightly longer than those for videofluoroscopy.


Laryngoscope | 1987

Videofluoroscopic and scintigraphic analysis of dysphagia in the head and neck cancer patient

Brian Humphreys; Robert H. Mathog; Robert T. Rosen; Peter R. Miller; Jaroslaw Muz; Richard N. Nelson

This paper presents two advances in the evaluation of swallowing function which better define the swallowing processes in the head and neck cancer patient. Videofluoroscopy, improved by computer‐assisted image analysis, provides more accurate information regarding oral and pharyngeal movement of structures. Radionuclide scintigraphy, a complementary technique, quantitatesbolus flow (transit times) and the degree of aspiration. Several cases demonstrate the advantages of the methods and their usefulness in evaluating the effects of cancer treatment. The improved techniques also provide opportunity for designing new strategies of medical and surgical rehabilitation.


Laryngoscope | 1994

Scintigraphic assessment of swallow efficiency postlaryngectomy.

Sandra Hamlet; Stephen Wilson; Robert J. Stachler; Walter A. Salwen; Jaroslaw Muz; Lance K. Heilbrun

There have been reports of a high incidence of hypopharyngeal stenosis in total laryngectomy patients when the surgery requires a partial pharyngectomy for pyriform sinus involvement. In this study, three groups were compared: total laryngectomy patients without partial pharyngectomy, total laryngectomy patients with partial pharyngectomy, and normal controls. All patients had received radiation therapy following surgery. All were maintaining oral nutrition, and none complained of dysphagia. Patients were tested between 1 and 7 months postradiation therapy, with a mean of 3 months. Measures of swallowing efficiency were based on scintigraphic data for a liquid swallow. Patients with partial pharyngectomy had abnormally long oropharyngeal transit times and low efficiency scores. For a subgroup of patients with partial pharyngectomy, swallowing data were available postsurgery and postradiation therapy. Postsurgery this patient group did not differ significantly from normal patients in swallowing efficiency, and swallowing efficiency deteriorated in postradiation therapy. This scintigraphic methodology is shown to be a sensitive method of assessing swallowing function in this patient population.


Thrombosis Research | 1992

Thrombosis in spinal cord injury

Yukihiko Fujii; Eberhard F. Mammen; Abdelmonem Farag; Jaroslaw Muz; Gino G. Salciccioli; Saul T. Weingarden

Some traditional coagulation assays and several new molecular markers of hemostatic activation were measured in 37 patients with spinal cord injury (SCI). Twenty one of the patients (57%) developed deep vein thrombosis (DVT). The radiofibrinogen uptake test (RFUT) was used to diagnose DVT. Thirty eight percent of quadriplegic and 88% of paraplegic patients developed DVT (p < 0.005). No significant differences were found in platelet counts, mean platelet volumes, fibrinogen levels, von Willebrand factor (Ag) levels, platelet factor 4 and beta thromboglobulin concentrations between the groups with and without DVT. Fibrinopeptide A, thrombin/antithrombin III (TAT) complexes and plasma D-dimer levels were significantly higher in the patients with thrombosis. Most patients with DVT had elevated TAT complex levels up to three days before the RFUT became positive. D-dimer levels were highest after the diagnosis had been made.


Cancer | 1984

Computerized bone scan. A potentially useful technique to measure response in prostatic carcinoma

Anibal Drelichman; David A. Decker; Muhyi Al-Sarraf; Vainutis K. Vaitkevicius; Jaroslaw Muz

Computerized bone scanning (CBS), a technique used to measure quantitative changes in bone scans, is described. Ten patients with histologically proven metastatic carcinoma of the prostate had sequential CBS performed. Good correlation was found between marked improvement in CBS (more than 50% average decrease in counts) and objective responses. Two patients had partial remission with more than 50% average decrease in uptake by prostatic cancer project criteria; both of them had good pain control. Three patients had worsening of their disease by CBS, which correlated with other parameters of disease progression (new lesions in bone survey, loss of weight and poor survival). In those patients with less than 50% average change the correlation is not so clear cut. An increase in percentage of uptake occurs in the first month after beginning of therapy, and no significant change is observed until 3 months. CBS is a technique that allows for objective measurement of quantitative changes in bone uptake, which is potentially useful for the evaluation of response to treatment in patients with metastatic bone disease from carcinoma of the prostate. Cancer 53:1060‐1065, 1984.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1991

Intestinal Neoplasm Mimicking a Meckel??s Diverticulum On Scintigraphic Imaging

Christopher J. Mehall; Roger M. Klein; Jaroslaw Muz; Lawrence P. Davis

A 33-year-old man presented with colicky, intermittent, midabdominal pain with nausea and vomiting. A Tc-99m pertechnetate abdominal scan was performed and revealed a focal area of increased uptake in the midabdomen associated with dilated proximal loops of small bowel. Surgery revealed a high-grade partial obstruction of the midportion of the jejunum secondary to an annular adenocarcinoma of the jejunum. This is the first known report of abnormal Tc-99m pertechnetate accumulation in an adenocarcinoma of the small bowel.

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Lewis Jones

Wayne State University

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