Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Radiology Attendings Universiry of Illinois, 1971-1975

1. Galdino Valvassori trained as an Otorynolarygologist and is considered the father of Head and Neck Radiology.  He was an excellent teacher and gave specialized and personalized lectures on the plain views of the head and neck imaging, as well as writing a definitive text based on sectional imaging of temporal bone sections.

2. Glenn Dobben was a highly skilled and busy neuroradiologist.  Residents had to schedule training sessions with him.  He once diagnosed a brain abscess on plain films, saving the patient's life.

3. Ahmad Parvin received his Radiology training at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.  He was a polished man of the world with an engaging personality, great sense of humor, and incisive teaching style.

4. Harris J. Feldman came to the University of Illinois from Baltimore, Maryland.  He graduated from the University of Maryland Medical School, and did his residency training at George Washington University.  Harris was an anglophile and was visiting England yearly.  He had a great sense of humor and assisted greatly in preparing research papers for publication.

5. Paul Sevilla was an affable Pilipino and a kind teacher.  He staffed general radiology.  He adopted a child in order to enjoy a complete family life. He later went to join the staff of North Chicago VA hospital.

6. Edward Paggio was the chief of Angiography when we were senior residents.  When he left UIC he moved to the State of Michigan.

7. James Hoffman came from the University of Minnesota and joined the angioraphy staff.

8. Gabriel Chan was a general radiologist. He proudly hand wrote in Chinese the order for our ethnic meal of the month, featuring China.

9. Drs. Virginia Patterson and Dan Pavel covered Nuclear Medicine.

10. Dr. Edwin Liebner the chieff of Radiation Therapy, obtained the Oldelft simulator and tomographic units for radiation therapy planning.  He served as interim chief of Radiology between 1970 and 1974.

11. Dr. Prasad Mantravadi was an attending in Radiation Therapy.  He was a most pleasant and competent therapist.  His most notable work was in the intra-arterial injection of Itrium-90 for the prevention and treatment of hepatic metastases from colon cancer.

12. Dr. Dudley a nice elderly physicist from Texas, Bob Kriz MS  and John Griffith MS taught us Medical Physics not a favorable topic but important in order to having a good understanding of our specialty. 

12. Dr. Vlastimil Capek a native of Czechoslovakia graduated from Charles University in Prague where he worked as a staff radiologist.  He escaped after the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia. He moved to Austria and then to the United States. He was first hired as a dark room technician.  When Dr. Harvey, the Chairman of Radiology realized the potential of the immigrant he advised him to take the State and Radiology boards which Dr. Capek passed.  He was hired as the chief of angiography. Dr. Capek who had learned the Seldinger technique while in Europe, he introduced it at UIC and maybe Chicago.  Residents learned this advanced technique of catheterizing vessels without a cut down or direct stick.  When Dr. Harvey retired Dr. Capek was appointed the Chief of the Department in 1975. 

13. Dr. Roger Harvey was the Chairman of University of Illinois Radiology between the years 1946 and 1970. He received his MD degree from the University of Rochester.  Dr. Harvey carried out the first radiation treatment with a Betatron unit and reported good results in 23 inoperable cancers. He was a research associate of the Manhattan Project in WWII.  In 1968, when he was the President of the American Cancer Society, he cautioned that lung cancer death rate in women, historically lower than men, was beginning to show a steady rise.  Dr. Harvey was the longest serving Radiology Chairman at the University of Illinois.  Unfortunately, the 1971 class of residents did not meet him but we learned from the staff of the Department that he was a great radiologist and a very kind man.


This post was written by Al Zuska and I.  We dedicate it to Harris Feldman who has been a loyal friend with a refreshing sense of humor. Harris was our favorite attending during our residency period.  It is also dedicated to Dr. Harvey whose kindness was well known to all who worked with him.  As a pioneer in Radiology he won the respect of physicians in multiple specialties at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

Friday, November 1, 2024

My Fellow Radiology Residents; University of Illinois 1971

On the 1st of July 1971, five young residents started a 3-year radiology residency. The department of Radiology had three divisions; Diagnostic, Therapy and Nuclear Medicine. In the Diagnostic division of that era chest x-rays and skeletal x-rays, were the majority of the studies. Upper and lower GIs were more numerous and detailed.  Intravenous pyelograms were fewer and more involved. Angiography was performed with needle sticks of the arteries of the organ to be studied.  Nuclear Medicine concentrated mainly on the thyroid gland, renal perfusion and bone and liver scanning. Radiation Therapy was performed with Ortho-voltage and Cobalt 60.  No hospital in Chicago and the country had Computed tomography.  Dr Huckman at Presbyterian Saint Lukes acquired the first EMI CT scanner in 1973, capable only of limited head CT imaging.  The fist high field 1.5T MRI by GE was acquired by University of Illinois in1977.  Interventional radiology was performed in few centers like University of Oregon but it was not done in Chicago when we completed our residency.  The first interventional procedure was a splenic embolization that was performed by Dr Spigos in 1977 on a patient with low platelet count.

My fellow residents in alphabetical order were:

James Doran.

A sociable young man from Ireland.  Upon his graduation he moved and worked in Saint John, New Brunswick in Canada.  This move brought him close to his native Ireland on the other side of the Atlantic.


Yuichi Inoue.

A young man from Japan.  Yuichi was always available to assist if workload required additional manpower. He did a fellowship in Neuroradiology.  Upon his graduation he returned and practiced in Osaka, Japan becoming one of the best Japanese neuroradiologists.


Frank Lopez 

A most pleasant Mexican American who began his career as a family practitioner . He struggled with the effects of multiple exostosis. He  unfortunately passed at an early age due to colon cancer.

 

Dimitrios Spigos

A young man who graduated from the University Athens Greece.  Upon his graduation he served in the Greek Navy as a physician assigned in destroyers and other vessels.  When he completed his residency in 1974 he stayed at UIC as faculty and chief of Angiography. His academic career was impressive and thus he was promoted to the rank of Professor.  In 1986 he became the Chairman of Radiology at Cook County Hospital and in 1992 he became the Chairman of Radiology at the Ohio State University


Albert Zuska

Al received his MD from the University of Illinois. As a native Chicagoan he was always helpful to us his fellow residents from abroad.  Al started his career at Saint Anne’s Hospital in Chicago.  In 1988 he moved to Allsaints Hospital in Racine, Wisconsin.  In 2004 he was the founder of Elk Grove Radiology and he and his group practiced at Alexian Brothers Hospital in Elk Grove, Illinois.  An eponymous disease, the Zuska's disease was first described by Al's uncle Joseph Zuska at the Cleveland Clinic in 1951. The patient involved was his wife with the only cure for this disease being surgical. A recent article by Serrano et al describes the breast imaging and histopathological findings of the disease.   


During our residency we were guided by our beloved Chairman Dr. Vlastimil Capek, his secretary Maria Surowiecki-Bass and Drs. Edwin Liebner in Therapy and Virginia Patterson in Nuclear Medicine.



This post Is dedicated to my wonderful friend Al Zuska who helped me to overcome the difficulties all new immigrants experience when first arrive to a new country.  We became and stayed friends although upon completion of our residency geography kept us apart.  I cannot find enough words to thank you Al for being a good friend during our formative years.  I also dedicate the post to Gianfranco Fizzotti who graduated from University of Pavia, Italy.  He did his residency at Cook County Hospital a program affiliated with UIC.  Gianfranco became attending at Grant Medical Center in Chicago.  He return to Italy for a brief period.  Upon his return to the States he joined the staff of Radiology at CCH and became the chief of mammography. After CCH he practiced in Glendive Montana and Kellogg Idaho.  The final of move of Gianfranco and his most gracious wife Pia was to Santa Fe, NM.  I visited the Fizzottis several times during their sojourn in the wild west.

Friday, December 1, 2017

American Women Prefer Annual Mammograms

The US Preventive ServicesTask Force (USPSTF) reaffirmed its recommendations to screen women ages 50-74 for breast cancer every two years stating that the harms of annual screening outweighed the benefits.  It also says the decision on frequency of screening should be individualized for women ages 40-49 based on risk.  The USPSTF found insufficient evidence to recommend for or against screening for women 75 or older.

Several professional societies like the American College of Radiology and Society of Breast Imaging advocate annual screening mammography starting at age 40.

A survey of 731 women indicated that 71% of the women who were 59 years old on average said they’d prefer a screening mammogram every year. Only 17% of participants felt having biennial screening would cause less anxiety. Of the patients who reported a prior abnormal mammogram, 13% believe biennial screening would cause less anxiety

The study was presented at the 103th annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.