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Dive into the research topics where Lida Crooks is active.

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Featured researches published by Lida Crooks.


Gut | 1999

Corpus gastritis is protective against reflux oesophagitis

Hashem B El-Serag; Amnon Sonnenberg; M. Mazen Jamal; J M Inadomi; Lida Crooks; Richard M. Feddersen

BACKGROUND Gastric acid is important in the pathogenesis of reflux oesophagitis. Acid production by the gastric corpus is reduced in corpus gastritis. AIMS To determine whether corpus gastritis protects against reflux oesophagitis. METHODS Patients presenting for elective oesophagogastroduodenoscopy were studied. Two biopsy specimens were taken from the antrum, corpus, and cardia and stained with haematoxylin/eosin and Diff-Quick II stains. The presence and severity of gastritis were graded according to a modified updated Sydney classification. RESULTS Of 302 patients, 154 had endoscopic signs of reflux oesophagitis. There was no difference between patients with and controls without oesophagitis in the overall infection rates with Helicobacter pylori. Acute or chronic corpus gastritis occurred less often in patients with than those without reflux oesophagitis. Compared with controls, corpus gastritis was less severe in patients with reflux oesophagitis. The presence of acute or chronic gastritis in the corpus was significantly correlated with either type of gastritis in other areas of the stomach. In a multivariate logistic regression, age, sex, smoking status, and the presence of chronic corpus gastritis all exerted a significant influence on the presence of reflux oesophagitis. Chronic corpus gastritis was associated with a 54% reduced risk for reflux oesophagitis. CONCLUSIONS While infection withH pylori alone may not affect the occurrence of reflux oesophagitis, the development of chronic corpus gastritis seems to be protective.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2000

Pulmonary Capillary Hemangiomatosis-Like Foci

Dean M. Havlik; Larry Massie; Wilbur L. Williams; Lida Crooks

Pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (PCH) typically occurs in young patients who have signs and symptoms of pulmonary hypertension. It commonly is misdiagnosed in life as pulmonary veno-occlusive disease, and the correct diagnosis usually is not made until autopsy. Autopsy records, including reports, gross photographs, histologic slides, clinical histories, and radiographic images, were reviewed to identify cases with morphologic changes characteristic of PCH. The previous case reports describe PCH as a diffuse process throughout both lung fields. All patients were symptomatic, and most died of the disease. This article details 8 cases of PCH-like foci that were incidental findings at autopsy in which the patients did not have symptoms of pulmonary hypertension nor did PCH contribute in any way to death. This is the first case series that describes pathologic changes of PCH occurring in this setting, and we hope to provide more interest in PCH and its natural history.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 1999

Characteristics of intestinal metaplasia in the gastric cardia

Hashem B El-Serag; Amnon Sonnenberg; M. Mazen Jamal; David C. Kunkel; Lida Crooks; Richard M. Feddersen

OBJECTIVE:Intestinal metaplasia of the gastroesophageal junction is frequently grouped together with Barretts esophagus. The area of the gastroesophageal junction is comprised of the distal esophagus and the gastric cardia. The aim of the present study was to assess whether intestinal metaplasia in the distal esophagus and gastric cardia represent two different entities with a different set of risk factors.METHODS:Patients presenting for elective upper endoscopy were enrolled into a prospective study. The presence of gastritis and intestinal metaplasia was evaluated in gastric biopsies taken from the antrum, corpus, and cardia. Barretts esophagus was defined by the presence of any length of columnar mucosa above the gastroesophageal junction.RESULTS:Of 302 patients, 50 patients had intestinal metaplasia of the gastric cardia, 73 Barretts esophagus, and 116 erosive esophagitis. Men were more prone than women to develop Barretts esophagus or erosive esophagitis. Both conditions were also more common among whites than nonwhites. Smoking was particularly common among patients with Barretts esophagus. Patients with cardiac intestinal metaplasia did not share these demographic characteristics. The prevalence of daily reflux symptoms, erosive esophagitis, and Barretts esophagus was similar among patients both with and without cardiac intestinal metaplasia. However, atrophy and intestinal metaplasia of the gastric antrum and corpus were found more frequently among patients with than without cardiac intestinal metaplasia.CONCLUSIONS:Intestinal metaplasia of the gastric cardia is different from Barretts esophagus. Although cardiac intestinal metaplasia is closely associated with signs of gastritis in other parts of the stomach, gastroesophageal reflux disease does not seem to be a risk factor. A diagnosis of Barretts esophagus should not be made based on the presence of intestinal metaplasia within the cardiac portion of the gastroesophageal junction.


Radiation Research | 1997

Thyroid nodularity and cancer among Chernobyl cleanup workers from Estonia

Peter D. Inskip; Michael F. Hartshorne; Mare Tekkel; Mati Rahu; Toomas Veidebaum; Anssi Auvinen; Lida Crooks; L. Gayle Littlefield; Alfred F. McFee; Sisko Salomaa; Sirpa Mäkinen; James D. Tucker; Karen Sorensen; William L. Bigbee; John D. Boice

Thyroid examinations, including palpation, ultrasound and, selectively, fine-needle aspiration biopsy, were conducted on nearly 2,000 Chernobyl cleanup workers from Estonia to evaluate the occurrence of thyroid cancer and nodular thyroid disease among men with protracted exposure to ionizing radiation. The examinations were conducted in four cities in Estonia during March-April 1995, 9 years after the reactor accident. The study population was selected from a predefined cohort of 4,833 cleanup workers from Estonia under surveillance for cancer incidence. These men had been sent to Chernobyl between 1986 and 1991 to entomb the damaged reactor, remove radioactive debris and perform related cleanup activities. A total of 2,997 men were invited for thyroid screening and 1,984 (66%) were examined. Estimates of radiation dose from external sources were obtained from military or other institutional records, and details about service dates and types of work performed while at Chernobyl were obtained from a self-administered questionnaire. Blood samples were collected for assay of chromosomal translocations in circulating lymphocytes and loss of expression of the glycophorin A (GPA) gene in erythrocytes. The primary outcome measure was the presence or absence of thyroid nodules as determined by the ultrasound examination. Of the screened workers, 1,247 (63%) were sent to Chernobyl in 1986, including 603 (30%) sent in April or May, soon after the accident. Workers served at Chernobyl for an average of 3 months. The average age was 32 years at the time of arrival at Chernobyl and 40 years at the time of thyroid examination. The mean documented radiation dose from external sources was 10.8 cGy. Biological indicators of exposure showed low correlations with documented dose, but did not indicate that the mean dose for the population was higher than the average documented dose. Ultrasound examinations revealed thyroid nodules in 201 individuals (10.2%). The prevalence of nodules increased with age at examination, but no significant associations were observed with recorded dose, date of first duty at Chernobyl, duration of service at Chernobyl, building the sarcophagus or working on the roof of neighboring buildings or close to the damaged reactor. Nodularity showed a nonsignificant (p(1) = 0.10) positive association with the proportion of lymphocytes with chromosome translocations, but associations with the frequency of variant erythrocytes in the GPA assay were weak and unstable (p(1) > or = 0.46). The majority of fine-needle biopsies taken on 77 study participants indicated benign nodular disease. However, two cases of papillary carcinoma and three benign follicular neoplasms were identified and referred for treatment. Both men with thyroid cancer had been sent to Chernobyl in May of 1986, when the potential for exposure to radioactive iodines was greatest. Chernobyl cleanup workers from Estonia did not experience a markedly increased risk of nodular thyroid disease associated with exposure to external radiation. Possible reasons for the apparent absence of effect include low radiation doses, the protracted nature of the exposure, errors in dose measurement, low sensitivity of the adult thyroid gland or the insufficient passage of time for a radiation effect to be expressed.


Gynecologic Oncology | 1988

Vulvar dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans

Danny Barnhill; Ralph O. Boling; Wiley Nobles; Lida Crooks; Thomas W. Burke

Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans of the vulva is an extremely rare neoplasm. This low-grade sarcoma of the dermis clinically appears to be encapsulated but microscopically has tumor projections well away from the central nodules. Wide local excision is the recommended treatment for dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans; however, a more radical surgical approach may be needed to obtain clear surgical margins. The following case study present the fifth reported patient with this unusual neoplasm on the vulva.


Gynecologic Oncology | 1988

Ovarian mucinous cystadenocarcinoma of low malignant potential associated with a mature cystic teratoma

Valerie P. Hunter; Danny Barnhill; David Jadwin; Lida Crooks

A 54-year-old female underwent exploratory laparotomy for evaluation of a large abdominopelvic mass. She was found to have a 29-pound multicystic tumor arising from the right ovary. There were no other gross intraabdominal abnormalities. Histologic examination of the mass revealed a mucinous cystadenocarcinoma of low malignant potential and a mature cystic teratoma. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of an ovarian epithelial adenocarcinoma of low malignant potential associated with a mature cystic teratoma.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1987

Organizing hematoma of the thigh : multiple imaging techniques

Royce E. Lovern; David A. Bosse; Michael F. Hartshorne; John M. Bauman; Jerome L. Billingsley; Bill F. Byrd; George D. Momii; Lida Crooks

A chronic, organizing hematoma of the thigh was imaged by multiple techniques. A remote history of trauma was noncontributory. The lesion was located by radiographs. Nuclear medicine studies showed no increased blood supply to the lesion but indicated that it was calcifying and did extend proximally. Ultrasound and CT studies could be variously interpreted to represent either a solid- or a fluid-filled lesion. An angiogram added little useful information. A differential diagnosis of an unexplained traumatic lesion vs a soft tissue tumor was made and surgery was performed. An organizing hematoma was excised.


Pancreas | 2007

Indium-111 pentetreotide uptake by pancreatic polypeptide cell hyperplasia: potential pitfall in somatostatin receptor scintigraphy.

Jeffrey Bunning; Shakil H. Merchant; Lida Crooks; Michael F. Hartshorne

A 71-year-old man with duodenal gastrin cell tumor was being evaluated for residual/metastatic disease. Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy (SRS) identified a 2-cm area of focal uptake within the head of the pancreas, consistent with a pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. Pathological examination did not reveal any malignancy within the pancreas. Instead, the pancreatic head showed pancreatic polypeptide cell hyperplasia. Strong and diffuse immunoreactivity to somatostatin receptor 2A antibody by immunoperoxidase staining confirmed that the lesion correlated with the site of radioactive tracer (Indium-111 pentetreotide) uptake seen on SRS. The current report therefore presents pancreatic polypeptide cell hyperplasia as a new pitfall in SRS.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1998

I-131 uptake in the breast for thyroid cancer surveillance with biopsy-proven benign tissue

Tate Allen; Philip W. Wiest; Sylvia Vela; Michael F. Hartshorne; Lida Crooks

A 37-year-old woman was seen for recurrent papillary carcinoma of the thyroid after thyroidectomy. After repeated surgery and I-131 therapy, follow-up I-131 scanning and thyroglobulin levels were negative. Subsequent I-131 surveillance, however, demonstrated bilateral breast uptake. A biopsy taken of this area in the right breast proved that the increased uptake was secondary to benign disease.


Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 1996

Predictive value of flow cytometric analysis in DNA contents in patients with locally advanced head and neck carcinoma

Gene Wong; Christine A. Stidley; Lynn G. Dressler; Michael Castillo; Lida Crooks; Susan Bartow

A retrospective study was performed on 61 eligible patients with stage III and IV (AJC/UICC Staging System) squamous carcinomas of the head and neck region who were treated with definitive radiotherapy with, or without, surgery. DNA contents were measured by flow cytometric analysis of archival paraffin blocks and were correlated with clinicopathological findings, tumour response and patient survival. Comparison of variables including treatment modality was performed for identification of significant prognostic factors. There were 28 diploid, 27 aneuploid tumours and the remaining six were questionable. All patients were followed-up for at least two years or until death. Aneuploid tumours had a significantly higher S-phase fraction (percentage S-phase) (p < 0.001). Neither ploidy nor percentage S-phase were found to have predictive value in tumour response or patient survival within the power of a sample size of 61. Twenty of the 27 (74 per cent) aneuploid tumours had a complete response (CR) whereas 19 out of 28 (68 per cent) diploid tumours achieved CR. Five-year survival by the Kaplan-Meier method was 33 per cent for both aneuploid and diploid tumours. However, nodal stage (N stage) was found to have significant predictive value in both tumour response and patient survival. The complete response for stage N0 patients was 96 per cent, N1 patients 61 per cent, N2 patients 60 per cent and 43 per cent for N3 patients (p < 0.002). Similarly, the five year survival for the N0 and N3 groups of patients was 53 per cent and 29 per cent respectively (p < 0.05).

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Mark Schuyler

University of New Mexico

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John M. Bauman

University of Washington Medical Center

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Katherine Gott

University of New Mexico

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Cecilia Wu

University of New Mexico

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Danny Barnhill

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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George Shopp

University of New Mexico

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