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A. Goldfarb

Sheba Medical Center

Publishes on Photodynamic Therapy Research Studies, Pain Management and Placebo Effect, bioluminescence and chemiluminescence research. 10 papers and 697 citations.

10Publications
697Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Photoradiation in the Treatment of Recurrent Breast Carcinoma<xref ref-type="fn" rid="fn2">2</xref>
Thomas J. Dougherty, Lawrence, Gilbert, Kaufman, Jerome H. et al.|JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute|1979
Cited by 364

Theodore Roosevelt compliments Josephine P. Peabody on her poem Harvest Moon but also takes the opportunity to criticize President Wilson for not entering World War. He refers to another of her poems about sheep equating it to the League to Enforce Peace and make the point that pacifism will not work in this situation.

A Randomized Clinical Trial of a Brief Hypnosis Intervention to Control Side Effects in Breast Surgery Patients
Guy H. Montgomery, Dana H. Bovbjerg, Julie B. Schnur et al.|JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute|2007
Cited by 293

BACKGROUND: Breast cancer surgery is associated with side effects, including postsurgical pain, nausea, and fatigue. We carried out a randomized clinical trial to test the hypotheses that a brief presurgery hypnosis intervention would decrease intraoperative anesthesia and analgesic use and side effects associated with breast cancer surgery and that it would be cost effective. METHODS: We randomly assigned 200 patients who were scheduled to undergo excisional breast biopsy or lumpectomy (mean age 48.5 years) to a 15-minute presurgery hypnosis session conducted by a psychologist or nondirective empathic listening (attention control). Patients were not blinded to group assignment. Intraoperative anesthesia use (i.e., of the analgesics lidocaine and fentanyl and the sedatives propofol and midazolam) was assessed. Patient-reported pain and other side effects as measured on a visual analog scale (0-100) were assessed at discharge, as was use of analgesics in the recovery room. Institutional costs and time in the operating room were assessed via chart review. RESULTS: Patients in the hypnosis group required less propofol (means = 64.01 versus 96.64 microg; difference = 32.63; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.95 to 61.30) and lidocaine (means = 24.23 versus 31.09 mL; difference = 6.86; 95% CI = 3.05 to 10.68) than patients in the control group. Patients in the hypnosis group also reported less pain intensity (means = 22.43 versus 47.83; difference = 25.40; 95% CI = 17.56 to 33.25), pain unpleasantness (means = 21.19 versus 39.05; difference = 17.86; 95% CI = 9.92 to 25.80), nausea (means = 6.57 versus 25.49; difference = 18.92; 95% CI = 12.98 to 24.87), fatigue (means = 29.47 versus 54.20; difference = 24.73; 95% CI = 16.64 to 32.83), discomfort (means = 23.01 versus 43.20; difference = 20.19; 95% CI = 12.36 to 28.02), and emotional upset (means = 8.67 versus 33.46; difference = 24.79; 95% CI = 18.56 to 31.03). No statistically significant differences were seen in the use of fentanyl, midazolam, or recovery room analgesics. Institutional costs for surgical breast cancer procedures were $8561 per patient at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Patients in the hypnosis group cost the institution $772.71 less per patient than those in the control group (95% CI = 75.10 to 1469.89), mainly due to reduced surgical time. CONCLUSIONS: Hypnosis was superior to attention control regarding propofol and lidocaine use; pain, nausea, fatigue, discomfort, and emotional upset at discharge; and institutional cost. Overall, the present data support the use of hypnosis with breast cancer surgery patients.

Tumour of the nose as a presenting feature of leukaemia
I. Brama, A. Goldfarb, O Shalev et al.|The Journal of Laryngology & Otology|1982
Cited by 12

A skin nodule on the external nose, as a presenting feature of acute myeloid leukemia, is described. The child presented with a lesion on the tip of the nose together with the clinical and haematologic features of leukaemia. The histological finding of the nodule was found to be a characteristic leukaemia cutis with leukaemia cell infiltrate in the skin. Epistaxis and external ear infection were also additional features of E.N.T. system involvement, as we find in other leukaemic patients. Since starting chemotherapy the patient has been well, in complete remission, and the lesion on the nose has almost disappeared.

Myopathological Findings in Thalassemia Major
Yehuda Shapira, Bethany A. Glick, Alex Finsterbush et al.|European Neurology|2008
Cited by 12

In thalassemia major (TM) one third of patients suffers from muscle wasting, weakness and cramps. Six patients with TM were studied. All had muscle wasting and proximal weakness; serum levels of vitamin E were low (0.6–7.0 µg/dl) while CPK, LDH and aldolase were normal. EMG revealed low-amplitude short-duration polyphasic potentials in 3 patients and normal activity in 3 others. Nerve conduction velocities were normal in 3 patients studied. On muscle biopsies, moderate variation in fiber size with fiber atrophy and preponderance of type 1 fibers were discovered. Our findings confirm the existence of nonspecific myopathic changes in TM. Chronic vitamin E deficiency should be considered in the pathogenesis of the myopathy in TM.