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Dive into the research topics where Lindsay Lawson is active.

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Featured researches published by Lindsay Lawson.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990

Corticosteroids Prevent Early Deterioration in Patients with Moderately Severe Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonia and the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)

Julio S. G. Montaner; Lindsay Lawson; Nirvair Levitt; Allan Belzberg; Martin T. Schechter; John Ruedy

OBJECTIVE To determine whether oral corticosteroids can prevent early deterioration in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. DESIGN Prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial. METHODS Included patients were having their first P. carinii pneumonia episode, had no other known active pulmonary pathology, had no contraindications for corticosteroids, received no anti-P. carinii pneumonia medications for more than 48 hours, and had oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry of 85% or more and less than 90% at rest or a 5-percentage-point decrease in oxygen saturation with exercise while breathing room air. Consenting subjects were randomly assigned to prednisone, 60 mg/d for 7 days, followed by a progressive tapering over 14 days or to an identical placebo. Early deterioration, the endpoint of the trial, was defined as a 10% decrease in baseline oxygen saturation on day 3 or thereafter. The cases of patients developing early deterioration were considered to be failures of treatment; the code was then broken, and the patients treatment was left to the judgment of the treating physician. Sequential analysis was done with the primary variable being development of early deterioration. RESULTS The trial was terminated 5 April 1989 on the basis of the sequential analysis when a total of nine episodes of early deterioration had occurred in the first 37 patients at an overall significance level of P = 0.0136. A total of 8 of 19 placebo-treated patients (42.1%) developed early deterioration compared with only 1 of 18 patients (5.6%) treated with corticosteroids. Baseline characteristics were not statistically different between the two treatment groups. The adjusted odds ratio for the treatment effect was 5.87 (95% CI, 1.27 to 27.4). The adjusted point estimates for the probability of early deterioration in the placebo and corticosteroid groups were 43% and 12%, respectively. All 8 patients in the placebo group developing early deterioration recovered rapidly with addition of corticosteroid treatment. The single patient with early deterioration in the corticosteroid group died on day 6 from overwhelming P. carinii pneumonia, as documented at autopsy. The corticosteroid group had an increased exercise tolerance on day 7 that persisted at day 30. CONCLUSION Oral corticosteroids prevent early deterioration and increase exercise tolerance in patients with moderately severe AIDS-related P. carinii pneumonia.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1998

The Incidence and Spectrum of AIDS-Defining Illnesses in Persons Treated with Antiretroviral Drugs

David M. Forrest; Elena Seminari; Robert S. Hogg; Benita Yip; Janet Raboud; Lindsay Lawson; Peter Phillips; Martin T. Schechter; Michael V. O'Shaughnessy; Julio S. G. Montaner

The incidence and spectrum of primary AIDS-defining illnesses in human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients receiving antiretroviral drugs may have changed since the introduction of newer antiretroviral agents. We performed a retrospective analysis of patients enrolled in the British Columbia Drug Treatment Program who were ever prescribed antiretroviral drugs between 1 January 1994 and 31 December 1996. Rates were calculated on a 6-month basis. There were 344 AIDS cases diagnosed among 2,533 participants between 1994 and 1996. The incidence of primary AIDS diseases decreased from 1994 to 1996, with a sharp decline in 1995 and 1996. There was no statistically significant change in the incidence of primary AIDS diagnoses relative to one another, and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and Kaposis sarcoma remain the most common AIDS index diagnoses. In patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in the modern era, the incidence of AIDS-defining illnesses has decreased substantially, but the spectrum of AIDS-defining illnesses remains unchanged.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1991

Aerosol Pentamidine for Secondary Prophylaxis of AIDS-related Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonia: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Study

Julio S. G. Montaner; Lindsay Lawson; André Gervais; Robert H. Hyland; Charles K. Chan; Julian Falutz; Paolo M. Renzi; Douglas MacFadden; Anita Rachlis; Ignatius W. Fong; Gary Garber; Andrew E. Simor; Norbert Gilmore; Mary M. Fanning; Geoffrey Taylor; Alain Martel; Walter F. Schlech; Martin T. Schechter

OBJECTIVE To assess the safety and efficacy of aerosol pentamidine for secondary prophylaxis of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). PARTICIPANTS Patients recovering from a first confirmed episode of AIDS-related P. carinii pneumonia who had no evidence of either another active AIDS-defining opportunistic infection or another pulmonary abnormality were considered eligible for the study but were included only if they had received no immunomodulators or antiretroviral agents other than zidovudine within 30 days of entry. One hundred sixty-two patients were randomized and started on the study drug. INTERVENTION Patients were randomly assigned to receive aerosol pentamidine, 60 mg per dose, or placebo, delivered using a hand-held, patient-triggered, ultrasonic nebulizer. The induction phase of treatment consisted of 5 doses over 14 days, followed by a maintenance phase beginning on day 21 and consisting of one dose every 2 weeks. RESULTS Thirty-two cases of P. carinii pneumonia were diagnosed before the termination of the trial; 27 cases occurred among 78 patients receiving placebo and 5 occurred among 84 patients receiving aerosol pentamidine. Estimates of the cumulative relapse rate of P. carinii pneumonia by 24 weeks were 50% and 9% for the placebo and pentamidine groups, respectively (P less than 0.001). Adverse reactions attributed to the study drug occurred in 15 of 78 patients receiving placebo and in 28 of 84 patients receiving pentamidine (P = 0.04). These were all mild or moderate in severity and did not preclude continued administration of the study drug. CONCLUSION Intermittent therapy with aerosol pentamidine is highly effective and well tolerated as secondary prophylaxis for AIDS-related P. carinii pneumonia.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1988

Surgical Management of Spontaneous Pneumothorax in Patients with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome

Arlen G. Fleisher; Gerry McElvaney; Lindsay Lawson; Alfred N. Gerein; Dennis R. Grant; G. Frank O. Tyers

Spontaneous pneumothorax has been reported with increasing frequency in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. In the past year, we treated 4 patients with spontaneous pneumothorax. All of them were treated with closed tube thoracostomy, and 1 patient with bilateral apical cysts eventually required bilateral thoracotomies and pleurectomies. Only 1 patient had an uncomplicated hospital course. The remaining patients had prolonged air leaks, and 2 had synchronous pneumothoraces. Pneumothorax appears to be associated with P. carinii pneumonia. We recommend closed tube thoracostomy as the initial treatment in symptomatic patients. Pleurectomy for air leaks persisting longer than seven days can be safely performed in patients fit for thoractomy.


Tubercle and Lung Disease | 1993

Oral corticosteroids in patients with mild Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)

J. S. G. Montaner; Silvia Guillemi; Jean Quieffin; Lindsay Lawson; Thinh N. Le; M. V. O'shaughnessy; John Ruedy; Martin T. Schechter

OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of oral corticosteroids in patients with mild Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). DESIGN Prospective, double blind, placebo controlled, randomized trial. METHODS Included were AIDS patients having their first episode of P. carinii pneumonia, who had no other known active pulmonary pathology, who had no contraindications for corticosteroids and who had received no other anti-P. carinii medications for more than 48 h. Subjects received either prednisone, 60 mg/day for 7 days, followed by a progressive tapering over 14 days, or identical placebo. The present analysis pertains to patients with mild P. carinii pneumonia as defined by a baseline resting oxygen saturation greater than 90% and a decrease in oxygen saturation during exercise while breathing room air of not less than 5 percentage points. Early deterioration, the end-point of the trial, was defined as a 10% decrease from baseline oxygen saturation on day 3 or thereafter. RESULTS At study termination, there were 12 subjects in the placebo group and 11 in the corticosteroid group. Baseline characteristics were not statistically different between the treatment groups. Early deterioration developed in 7 and 1 patients in the placebo and corticosteroid groups respectively (P = 0.027). In addition, by day 3, a number of parameters were less favorable in the placebo group relative to the corticosteroid group including median oxygen saturation (85% vs 97%; P = 0.003), lactic dehydrogenase (1514 vs 763; P = 0.013), median respiratory rate (30 vs 22; P = 0.003), median heart rate (100 vs 81; P = 0.002), and median temperature (39 vs 37; P = 0.024). Even though patients suffering early deterioration in the placebo group were switched to corticosteroids, significant differences between the groups remained at day 30 with regard to exercise tolerance. More than half of patients assigned to the corticosteroid group exercised for a median of 6.5 min on day 30 (P = 0.017). CONCLUSION Oral corticosteroids prevent early deterioration and increase exercise tolerance in patients with mild AIDS-related P. carinii pneumonia as defined on the basis of pulse oximetry.


Canadian Respiratory Journal | 1995

Adjunctive Corticosteroid Therapy Decreases Lung Permeability in Patients with AIDS-Related Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonia

Silvia Guillemi; Allan Belzberg; Lindsay Lawson; Martin T. Schechter; Julio S. G. Montaner

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of adjunctive corticosteroid therapy on lung permeability as measured by Tc-DTPA lung clearance scan in patients with AIDS-related Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP).


Canadian Respiratory Journal | 2000

An infected mediastinal cyst.

Lindsay Lawson; Andrew C Mason

The authors describe a 43-year-old patient who had a mediastinal mass that became infected after a transbronchial needle aspirate biopsy. A paraspinal, extrapleural window with a saline-lidocaine mixture was created that allowed the placement of a percutaneous drainage catheter into the infected lesion. This procedure resulted in an excellent clinical outcome, and obviated the need for a thoracotomy and more invasive surgical management.


The American review of respiratory disease | 2015

Morphology of peripheral airways in current smokers and ex-smokers.

Joanne L. Wright; Lindsay Lawson; Peter D. Paré; Wiggs Bj; Susan M. Kennedy; James C. Hogg


The American review of respiratory disease | 1984

THE DETECTION OF SMALL AIRWAYS DISEASE

Joanne L. Wright; Lindsay Lawson; Peter D. Paré; Susan M. Kennedy; Wiggs Bj; James C. Hogg


The American review of respiratory disease | 1983

The structure and function of the pulmonary vasculature in mild chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The effect of oxygen and exercise.

Joanne L. Wright; Lindsay Lawson; Peter D. Paré; Richard O. Hooper; Peretz Di; Nelems Jm; Michael Schulzer; James C. Hogg

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Martin T. Schechter

University of British Columbia

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Peter D. Paré

University of British Columbia

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Joanne L. Wright

University of British Columbia

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James A. Russell

University of British Columbia

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Jean Quieffin

University of British Columbia

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John Ruedy

University of British Columbia

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David M. Forrest

University of British Columbia

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James C. Hogg

University of British Columbia

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Juan J. Ronco

University of British Columbia

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