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Featured researches published by Karen F. Deutsch.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1993

Radiation synovectomy revisited

Edward Deutsch; J. W. Brodack; Karen F. Deutsch

Radiation synovectomy is a potential weapon in the therapeutic armamentarium of nuclear medicine. It is an attractive alternative to surgical or chemical synovectomy for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. In this article the clinical results obtained with radiation synovectomy from the 1950s through 1992 are summarized and reviewed. Even after taking into account the paucity of well-controlled trials and rigorous clinical follow-up, it is clear that radiation synovectomy is efficacious in controlling the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis. However, the procedure is not widely used because of concerns about leakage of radioactivity from the treated joint, and the resulting high doses that can be delivered to nontarget organs. New approaches to the preparation of radiolabeled particles for use in radiation synovectomy promise to minimize this leakage and thus allow the full potential of this important radiotherapy to be realized.


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 1992

Rhenium-186 hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate for the treatment of painful osseous metastases

Harry R. Maxon; Stephen R. Thomas; Vicki S. Hertzberg; Louis E. Schroder; Emanuela E. Englaro; Ranasinghange Samaratunga; Howard I. Scher; Jonathan S. Moulton; Edward Deutsch; Karen F. Deutsch; Harold J. Schneider; Craig C. Williams; Gary J. Ehrhardt

Rhenium-186 (tin)hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate (HEDP) is a new radiopharmaceutical that localizes in skeletal metastases in patients with advanced cancer. A single intravenous administration of approximately 34 mCi (1,258 MBq) resulted in significant improvement in pain in 33 of 43 evaluable patients (77%) following the initial injection, and in 7 of 14 evaluable patients (50%) following a second treatment. Patients responding to treatment experienced an average decrease in pain of about 60%, with one in five treatments resulting in a complete resolution of pain. The only adverse clinical reaction was the occurrence after about 10% of the administered doses of a mild, transient increase in pain within a few days following injection. Statistically significant but clinically unimportant decreases in total white blood cell counts and total platelet counts were observed within the first 8 weeks following the injection; no other toxicity was apparent. Rhenium-186(Sn)HEDP is a useful new compound for the palliation of painful skeletal metastases.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1997

The placebo effect

Mary Jane Heeg; Karen F. Deutsch; Edward Deutsch

Abstract.The placebo effect will have a growing importance in the field of nuclear medicine as the potentials for palliative therapy with internal sources are realized. It is important for nuclear medicine physicians and their colleagues to be familiar with the role of placebo responses in clinical trials, especially when such trials involve the subjective assessment of pain. A summary of the literature on the placebo effect in pain studies is presented in which traditional values for placebo responses are contrasted with more current thinking in the field. The few published double-blind studies of pain relief after treatment with radiotherapeutic agents are summarized specifically with respect to their cited placebo response.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1993

Chemistry and Biological Behavior of Samarium- 153 and Rhenium- 186-Labeled Hydroxyapatite Particles : Potential Radiopharmaceuticals for Radiation Synovectomy

Marco Chinol; Shankar Vallabhajosula; Stanley J. Goldsmith; Michael J. Klein; Karen F. Deutsch; Lori K. Chinen; James W. Brodack; Edward Deutsch; Barbara A. Watson; Andrew J. Tofe


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1998

Novel technetium (III)-Q complexes for functional imaging of multidrug resistance (MDR1) P-glycoprotein

Carolyn L. Crankshaw; Mary Marmion; Gary D. Luker; Vallabhaneni V. Rao; Julie L. Dahlheimer; B. Daniel Burleigh; Elizabeth G. Webb; Karen F. Deutsch; David Piwnica-Worms


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1994

Human biodistribution, dosimetry and clinical use of technetium(III)-99m-Q12

Claudio Rossetti; Giovanna Vanoli; Giovanni Paganelli; Marek Kwiatkowski; Felicia Zito; Fabio Colombo; Chiara Bonino; Assunta Carpinelli; Rosangela Casati; Karen F. Deutsch; Mary Marmion; Steven R. Woulfe; Fabio Lunghi; Edward Deutsch; Ferruccio Fazio


Archive | 1992

Preparation of apatite particles for medical diagnostic imaging

Edward Deutsch; Karen F. Deutsch; William P. Cacheris; William H. Ralston; David H. White; Dennis L. Nosco; Robert G. Wolfangel; Janet B. Wilking; Linda Meeh; Steven R. Woulfe


Inorganic Chemistry | 1997

Studies of the Structure and Composition of Rhenium−1,1-Hydroxyethylidenediphosphonate (HEDP) Analogues of the Radiotherapeutic Agent 186ReHEDP

R. C. Elder; Jie Yuan; Bella Helmer; David W. Pipes; Karen F. Deutsch; Edward Deutsch


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1995

Treated calcium/oxyanion-containing particles for medical diagnostic imaging

Edward Deutsch; Karen F. Deutsch; Dennis L. Nosco; William H. Ralston; David H. White; Janet B. Wilking; Robert G. Wolfangel; Steven R. Woulfe


Archive | 1994

Radiopharmaceutical formulations having non-stannous reductants

James W. Brodack; Mark A. Derosch; Edward Deutsch; Karen F. Deutsch; Mary Marmion Dyszlewski

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Edward Deutsch

University of Cincinnati

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James W. Brodack

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David L. White

University of California

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