Michael L. Ibanez
University of Texas at Austin
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Featured researches published by Michael L. Ibanez.
Cancer | 1966
Michael L. Ibanez; William O. Russell; Jorge Albores-Saavedra; Pietro Lampertico; E. C. White; R. Lee Clark
Thirty‐three autopsy cases of clinical thyroid carcinoma were studied as to types, precursor changes and biologic behavior of the tumors. Eleven carcinomas were of the solid type; 13 were spindle and giant cell and the remainder were papillary, follicular or both. The findings indicate that spindle and giant cell carcinomas arise from the papillary and follicular type. No precursor changes were found in the other tumors or in 9 occult carcinomas found at autopsy. The biologic behavior of all types, other than the spindle and giant cell, is unpredictable; survivals vary from a few months to 20 years or longer. The mortality rate is much higher than commonly is believed: Among the 554 patients treated, it was 19%. The treatment for all thyroid carcinomas is total thyroidectomy.
Cancer | 1967
Michael L. Ibanez; V. William Cole; William O. Russell; R. Lee Clark
Of a series of thyroid carcinomas, approximately 10% have been of the solid type. The histologic pattern of solid thyroid carcinoma is distinctive: It is the only type that contains amyloid and it is unmixed with other types. The incidence in males and females is essentially equal. Solid carcinoma tends to metastasize to the cervical lymph nodes and the mediastinum. The diseases with which it is associated brings this type into special perspective among thyroid cancers. Its histologic pattern is not a guide to the prognosis. The treatment of choice is total thyroidectomy with resection of all regional metastases. Of 33 patients who were followed for five years or more after operation, 40% had no evidence of thyroid cancer at the time of this study; 15% were living with disease; 36% had died of the disease and 9% had died of other causes.
American Journal of Surgery | 1966
John M. Bardwil; Charles T. Reynolds; Michael L. Ibanez; M.Armando Luna
Abstract The records of a hundred patients with tumors of minor salivary glands who were observed at The M. D. Anderson Hospital were reviewed. Of eighty-seven patients with malignant tumors, all of whom were followed up for a minimum of three years, forty-one died of uncontrolled disease. The pathologic diagnosis should be established before any treatment for these tumors is carried out. The treatment for benign tumors is local excision of the tumor together with a modest amount of normal surrounding tissue. Radical excision is the treatment of choice for previously untreated malignant tumors and for resectable local recurrences. The indications for radiotherapy observed in this series of cases were (1) local recurrences not amenable to excision, (2) incompletely removed tumor, and (3) questionable tumor, either clinically or microscopically, at the margins of the surgical specimen.
Cancer | 1967
James J. Butler; Hrafn Tulinius; Michael L. Ibanez; A. J. Ballantyne; R. Lee Clark
Thyroid carcinoma was found unexpectedly in the thyroid gland or lymph nodes, at autopsy or in the surgical material removed from 22 patients with carcinoma of the head or neck region, or of the lung. Of 120 patients who had wide‐field laryngectomy for squamous carcinoma of the head or neck, 6 (5%) had carcinoma in the portion of the thyroid gland removed at laryngectomy. Twenty of the 22 patients had mixed papillary and follicular or pure follicular thyroid carcinoma in the thyroid gland or lymph nodes and 2 had the solid type with amyloid stroma. Carcinoma was demonstrated in the thyroid glands of 15 of the 22 patients. Only a portion of the gland or none at all was removed from the other 7 patients and no primary carcinoma was demonstrated. Carcinoma was discovered, however, in every case in which the whole thyroid gland was available for study. Histologically, the metastases of mixed papillary and follicular carcinoma varied from predominantly papillary to predominantly follicular. The smaller the metastases, the more prominent were the follicles and the more normal was their appearance. From our observations, we believe that any thyroid tissue found in a lymph node represents metastatic thyroid cancer.
American Journal of Surgery | 1963
Raymond G. Rose; Mavis P. Kelsey; William O. Russell; Michael L. Ibanez; Edger C. White; R. Lee Clark
c oNsr~~n4nLE uncertainty persists concerning what constitutes adequate surgical resection for differentiated carcinoma of the thyroid gland. The present discussion will be limited to the problem of surgery of the thyroid gland itself, when cancer is found grossly involving only one lobe. In recent years, the trend has been toward more extensive resection of the thyroid gland. With rare exceptions [l-3] genera1 agreement has come that anything less than total lobectomy is inadequate and not curative in this situation, because of the high incidence of residual cancer (20 per cent) found on completing the Iobectomy [4] or of stump recurrence [s;]. Beyond this point, authoritative opinion is divided among those who advocate only total lobectomy with or without resection of the isthmus [6,7], those who advocate total Iobectomy plus resection of some portion of the opposite lobe [4,8], and those who advocate total thyroidectomy [9-201. Support for use of the more extensive procedures has come from the observation of intragIandular spread or “muIticentric involvement” by cancer, reported after routine surgical pathologic examination as I I to 30 per cent involvement of the opposite lobe [8,9,12-r4,18,19,21,22]. Crile [7], however, takes the position that “the mere presence of isoIated microfoci of cancer in a lobe of the thyroid does not necessariIy mean that cancer will develop cIinicaIIy.” For the past twelve years at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute, we have been engaged in evaIuating the adequacy of these primary surgical procedures for carcinoma of the thyroid gIand. Prior to rgfo, at this institution, total lobectomy on the involved side, with or without neck dissection, was considered adequate therapy whenever there was no gross involvement of the opposite lobe. Later, when total thyroid gland resections were performed to facilitate radioiodine therapy of metastatic thyroid cancer, a significant incidence of cancer in the contraIatera1 Iobe was observed. This cast doubt on the adequacy of tota unilateral lobectomy as a curative procedure. As a result, a program for evaluating the problem was initiated whereby patients who had undergone previous “curative” lobectomy would either be submitted to prophyIactic resection of the remaining lobe or would be observed clinically on a long-term basis. A third group of patients would be treated by tota thyroidectomy as the initial surgical procedure or following previous thyroid biopsy or partial lobectomy. A corolIary project was undertaken to study the resected gland, whenever possible, by subseria1 whoIe organ sections in order to determine the mode of intraglandular dissemination and the true incidence of contralateral lobe involvement. Previous communications from this institution [g,23] have reported this dissemination to the opposite lobe in 30 per cent of glands examined by routine pathologic technics and in 84 per cent of glands submitted to subseria1 whole organ study. The present report concerns that group of patients with thyroid cancer whose initial surgical management was total lobectomy with or without neck dissection. This was then folIowed either by immediate prophylactic
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1975
Naguib A. Samaan; Robert C. Hickey; Tom D. Bedner; Michael L. Ibanez
Three patients with carcinoid tumor associated with hyperparathyroidism are described. All patients showed a high circulating immunoreactive calcitonin level with no differential increase in the neck venous catheterization specimens, suggesting that the high concentrations of circulating immunoreactive calcitonin may have come from the carcinoid tumor. We think that the hyperparathyroidism in these patients was primary and that the association with carcinoid tumor represents another form of multiple endocrine tumor formation. Hyperparathyroidism should be investigated in patients with carcinoid tumor.
Cancer | 1969
Eduardo P. Wyse; C. Stratton Hill; Michael L. Ibanez; R. Lee Clark
All patients with thyroid carcinoma seen at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute at Houston between March 1944 and June 1968 were studied to determine the incidence of a second malignant tumor either before or after the diagnosis of thyroid cancer. Additionally, those patients having thyroid cancer as the initial cancer were studied to determine their risk of developing a second malignant tumor. Analysis of the latter was by the patient‐year method. Results showed that thyroid cancer patients have an increased number of second primary malignant tumors, and that they have a higher risk of developing a second primary after the diagnosis of thyroid cancer than the general population of the state of Connecticut. Possible explanations for these findings are discussed.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1962
Felix Rutledge; Michael L. Ibanez
WI T H the development of the cryostat, the frozen section technique has been refined for successful application in rapid, operating room diagnosisl-5 Formerly, this technique was unsatisfactory in gynecologic surgery, because ( 1) the multiple, small tissue fragments (e.g., endometrial curettings) taken for pathologic examination could not be held together during section, (2) the thickness of the sections provided poor microscopic detail, and (3) only small tissue sections, inadequately representative of the total specimen, could be cut with the old apparatus. Our experience indicates that the cryostat now produces slides equal in quality (staining properties, thinness of sections, and cellular detail) to those prepared by the slower paraffin block method. Thus, this improved technique combines the time advantage of the older frozen section method with the technical excellence of slides produced by the paraffin block method. The cryostat, which makes possible immediate pathologic examination and diagnosis of surgical specimens, has multiple applications in gynecologic surgery. This paper concerns its use in the preparation and evaluation of cone specimens removed from the cervix during surgery. The whole procedure is rapid and definitive. After the surgeon performs a cold knife
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1977
Naguib A. Samaan; Michael L. Ibanez; C. Stratton Hill
Excerpt Sipple in 1961 (1) reported an endocrine tumor syndrome that is an association between thyroid carcinoma and pheochromocytoma. Later, it was ascertained that this combination of tumors repr...
Postgraduate Medicine | 1970
Joseph G. Sinkovics; Michael L. Ibanez
As the incidence of tuberculosis decreased the last 10 years, new cases of leprosy increased. The highest incidence of new cases in the United States was reported in Texas. It may be that with the decline of tuberculosis, the natural ecology of mycobacteria is reversed, and if measures are not taken, the leprosy/tuberculosis ratio may again favor leprosy.