SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT PRZYBORA, L. - PRZYBYLKIEWICZ, Z.
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP86-00513R001343430002-1
Release Decision:
RIF
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
100
Document Creation Date:
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date:
June 15, 2000
Sequence Number:
2
Case Number:
Publication Date:
December 31, 1967
Content Type:
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
![]() | 4.86 MB |
Body:
EXCERFTA MEDICA 5ec 5 Vol 12/? General Pat),
-Y 59
- Brodaw-
2000. FLORID PAPILLOMATOSIS OF THE NIPPLE DUCTS (JONES)
czakowatoAd rozrostowa Jonesa brodawki sutkowej (papillomatosis florida
Jonesi mam illae) - P r z % L. and Wojnerowicz C. Wojew6dzk.
oz___A~bgo
Otrodka Onkol., P na , . OTWORY 195B.. 8/2 (83-99) Illus. 10
Two cases are presented, and the latin name of 'papillomatosis florida Jonesi
mamillae' is proposed. Florid papillomatosis of Jones is a proliferative process at
the borderline of benign hypertrophy and benign tumour and may be classified as
precancerous lesion. Clinical symptoms are reddening of the nipple with a dis;-
charging erosion at the top. Underlying this erosion is a well demarcated but non-
encapsulated little nodule. about 0.5-1.5 cm. in diameter. Surgical removal of the
nipple with the nodule and the terminal parts of the nipple ducts In therapeutically
sufficient. (IX. 5, 16)
01
onAs
E'( :':D')TA !-:D-11;."t ~cc 16 7ol 7 /11 Cancer N,.),.,e:C-er 19
yz.. Histological topography of carcinorna in situ of the cervix uteri
PRZYBORA L. A. and PLL-To%v,,L A. Histopathol. Lah., First Clin. of Obstet. and
_W~ 12/2 (263-277) Graphs 2 Tahl" 3 1 Iltls- 17
G-y-t teco., znan Cancer (Philad.) 1950,
13y detailed histological stud rec-ous truc t toil, a
Y and nd by plotting, the authors have
determined the extent of carcinoma in situ or tile titerine cervix in too cases. Their
findings slio%v that almost 50~,, (if thecases had simultaneous involvement of the
portio vaginalis, the external os and the endocervical canal; the endocervical canal
was involved in slightly more than one half of tile cases. The vaginal rornices were
involved in almost 60,/0- One quarter of the cases showed endocervical involvement
greater than a i cm. depth. It is pointed out that clectrocoagulation of the cervix,
clectroconization and even amputation orthe cervix uteri are inadequate procedures
for removing the cancer-bearing portion. ApProximatclY 3no" of the cases tinder
study might have been cured by. this type of procedure; that is, tile cases not ex-
ceeding a t cm. lesion on tile portio and a 0.3 cm. depth within the canal. However,
because of the limitations of these procedures (70% would not have had adequate
therapy) it is concluded that the.operative treatment of carcinoma in situ must be
hysterectomy %vith a wide vaginal cuff resection. This report from Poland closely
parallels the finding5 of several American authors. Kuzma - Milwaukee Wis.
EYCERPTA MEDICA Sec 13 Vol 13/11 Dermatology Nov 59
3056. N
MALIGNANCY OF DERMATOFIBROSARCOMA PROTUBERANS AND RE-
PORT OF 2 CASES WITH LYINIP11-GLAND METASTASES - P rz Ybora
L. A . and W o j n e r o w i c z C . Surg, Dept. . County Oncol.-C~entre.
41-07nall - ONCOLOGIA (Basel) 1959,1213 (236-254) Illus. 13
The literature on fibrosarcoma of the skin is reviewed and 13 cases are reported:
~7 were primary tumours, and 5 were recurrences after treatment elsewhere;
among the latter were 2 cases with lymph node metastases. one of which had also
metastasen in the lungs. The diagnosis was made exclusively by means of histolog-
ical examination. It is stressed that this type of tumour is not only a clinical
entity but also a morphological one. The specific structural pattern is the 'twisted
strip pattern' (stellate or whorled pattern of other authors). Three types are dis-
tinguished: type 'A' - dermatofibroma proliferans; type 'B' - dermatofibrosarco-
ma pratuberans; type 'C' - dermatofibrosarcoma in fibrosarcoma simplex vertens.
The 3 types are illustrated by photomLcrographs. The biological behaviour o'
these tumours tends to slowly Increasing dedifferentiation and a change of growth
from slow to rapid. Especially the poorly. differentiated tumours of type 'C' de-
mand wide and radical surgical treatment, (XVI, 9, 13)
AI
W W 0 0 0 9 0 9 0 0 0 9 9 0 9 0 0 a S 4 49 a a e OT
34 1? j0 41 Q As 43
A I --.rA
- T H-CLIV-1 -1A i A 1-2
L-Ul I, I-D --D I ~c 0
,qt Of
Studies W. Kuczyi"ki. S-
00 Przyloro. and W. F- Kotteras. P,~gW o"'. 6.2.54-7.
19R)" cf, (-1 43, vamm,
00 'klffvl~i -.f liictti;e~, ore itivvw. Moimurv c%nitcot. bi-
tatm- , 414.1 Imillic acid.. 16111mil.. -1.1. ~illl -00
m%t. J tw,,Avu~ md Ettlif. A.Wn
700
.00
06
06
00 =09
eW Zs
0" i:
t!e 0
two
A LA TALLURGICAL LITINATtAt CLA&SIFICATICk t: Sim
IQ-
.. ... .
17.1 so 0
b 7 TA An I
n.
0 IN
a
U a
t"T '
a
4
'.
I
0 0 e 0 0 40 0 0 40 O'e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
o1 0 0 0 0710 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * *-W-W-w-*~&.*_WE-_W_-w w - -
g;o 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 * - -- -I . .
I S I if 11 11 U W 11 16 17 Ji I iT If IT 9-9 A 13 14 31 J-6-9, -M
so
00 "so
00: 1-00
00
so
00
-00
.00
4~~'7- "TIM N ISH LIG% T&i. I14uczynski, W., tIoro'
'hem.,
00 uni ilot-ras, WF (Frezeglad G 1949, vol. 6, 254-257;
go-. 11 1
a* 4
abstr. In chem nbAr., 1949, vol. 4.2, 0 13). "he followirz
00 -~~ta on vur-Jolic, sample3 of lignites are given; moisture
ool~ , too
:-,ntent, ash, blt=ens, and humic acils. Bitumens were
So 00
s~rtra~!tnd with a mixture of, benzene and ethyl alcohol.
see
L
Ia.% L A 89TALLUKKAL LITIMATtOf CLASUPKATION 009
too.# to. 40.9n.
OR -ME
7k 4 0 3 2 V
U,S AV C, 4 4f It a, a, In a It a In An A 1 :4 fWa. a V I ff .0 9 do
0 0 W 0 00 0 00 0 0 000 so 0040 0 0 66 0 0 o 4 o we"O 0 0 0 0 0 a
~o 0 0 0.0 00 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 o'* 0.00 og 0 0 01* 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 00.0 0 0~0
0
a 0 0
05 4 t # 11 11 U is '0 "1 4 11 x 21 n n- 2. 25 li :1 A 2~ A Ll 13 M 2 k 0 M b V 1; V 5) U 43 4, 0
L-A-I F A P. - X V Z _AkA Be 7, TV V t i
Oe ,,r -00
-00
oo .00
0 ,0,
-00
so
McdW of eudmfti; a standard *"or of a mean of :A~e
isal a data by using the MINIM of analyses made
100 Ago,
=Sly. 'jt,,,f MO. Alp, Fareil
A 30.3U3-31T."LlIt~! RrEfljDih)(19633). Math. Irra
KUL
so
zoo
00 --00
-00
ZOO
00
AO
0 AO
t.00
OTALLUPWAL LIT n-TUIRE C I L-SlIff.CAtICN Z- ~00
M,SL A
I I IT a, r lk ',I~ III a
*44
0"0 '0 0,0 .0 0 0 000'0 0 CO 0
e 0,04100041400.400: 00 0
00 0
41;0000064,090,00 :r.00,000000000000*0900002
PRZYBOROWSKI, T~6deusz
P 0 L D
RYCHAn, Juliusx, TY WO WS .11
F RZYBO RQ and RA K
kbjevodttwo Sanitary &nd _~pidemiologlcal Ste--
c, r Wo e u, o d z k, aStacJa' Sand tz: rno- Epidemio logic z"Q) (.0.1 rfic-
t o r Dr. Jullusz RYCHARD) and the Institute of Marine
KI edA cj. n etjnsrytu~v viedyc,,-r.)- Norskiej) (DIrecter- Prof. Dr.
botll in Gdansk
f, PO 15 or. ing wlth "Weldirin" Inaecticide on a Shi
Warsat4, 'Prze,-,lad, ~,pidetniologicznX, Vo 16, _mo 6:2,
I L p
-4 1.) n i, rac t iL Au the rs' Jkigll sh summary IAn inta.~acatior. oa t-
5ome membars
or, a forai_-n ship in Gdank va reported
n," the crew suddenly fell ill, and at; first gastroentaritis
elljo -.0 bacteria WA's suspected. Epidemiolal-i c &"'& enquiri*~s.
anid. Imboratory tests confirmad intoxication due to Ditldrinc"
Cootril will prophylactic rzeasurat, as woll as a clinical
of thr~ intoxication are present*-,d. Of tha e..:. a". t
two are Polish, and six are American and 'WHO.
1J
EJSMONT, Wladyslaw; JASZCZENKO, Surietoslaw; KULESZA, Kazimier,-; LEWAISKI,
T, ogai-67
AL'7002755 SOURCE CODE: PO/0046/661/011 /00V0359) 0367:
Q0 i
AUTHOR: Chwaszczewska, Janina--Khvashchevska, Ya.; Freindl, Ludwik--Frendll, L.;
arcz, Wa-fa-e-Ena~r-Karch, V.; 1~rzyborski, Wincenty-Priborski, V.; Slapa, Mieczyslaw:,'..-11~
V
ORG: [Chwas7czewska; Przyborskil Institute of Nuclear Research, Swierk; [Freindl]
li Institute of Nuclear Ph sics, Krakow; [Karez] Institute of Physics, Jagellonian
y
University, Krakow; [Slapal Central Laboratory for Radiological Protection, Warsaw,~..:.
'LE:
T
11 Semiconductor..system for charged particles identification
SOURCE: Nukleonika, v. 11, no. 5, 1966, 359-367
TOPIC TAGS: particle counter, radiation counter
ABSTRACT: A syst-em consi.-~f.ing of two semiconductor counters of types dE/dx-and E
was built to separate particles from nuclear reactions. The properties of this-
system were checked by detection of products of reactions induced by 24.8 Mlev alpha
Mev deuterons on.Au, C, and Ca nuclei. The authors than
;-Particles and,12-1, I k
Pro-lessor H. Ni(~wodniczanski and Professor B. Buras for their interest in this
work. 1he authors also thank Doctor K; Grotowski, Doctor A. Strzalkowski and
Doctor A. Budzai-,rviski for their advice.and encouragement throughout the progress
of this work. 'A'hey give special thanks to Cyclotron Operation Staff for x-anning
the machine. arig. art.. has: ~ 13 f i,gures. [Orig.: ar-L. in Eng,.] ENAI
SUB CODE 003 OTH REF: 0014
18 SU13M DATE: OqDec65 ORIG REF;
I-Card 1/1)LO,
I 2843--b6 --- T -,JPI
V
ACC NR: AP6018277 SOURCE CODE: PO/0046/66/011/002/0137/013$
AUTHOR: Przyborski, W.
ORG:' Laboratory II for Nuclear Physics, Institute of Nuclear Research
.Swierk~
TITLE: Simple,cryostat f or cooling semiconductor nuclear radiation detectors
~SOURCE: Nukleonika, v.. 11, no. 2,~1966 137-138
TOPIC TAGS-
cryostat, cooling radiation detecto .n clear radi
r u ation: up-ectrorrieter:,,r,,
~ABSTRACT: A cry o s t a t~s*ee,jFig.~1).for cooling semiconductor nuclear radiation,:..
detectors, in particular germanium spectrometers operating at the liquidnitrogen-
temperature, has been,-designed and const
ructed in Laboratory,II for~Nuclear Physics.
in the Institute of Nuclear Research. The cryostat utilizes'the thermal, me a~l
chanic,
and electrical prioperties,of teflon. To eliminate additional noiseisources'and-to
make it possible.to.use the detectors in various electrical systems, the specimen
is sepatated from,the~base by a.sa hir lleh
pp e single c stal washe which is an excelleh
ry
heat conductor and.electrical insulator at'the.liquid nitrogen temperatuirie, The
radiation source can be moved in relation tothe detector without admitting air: into
the cyroti tat and hence without warming the specimen. Tests showed that 20 min afterr.,
immersing thlecopper rod in the liquid nitroge
n bith the temperature of the.speci-'T,
men reaches a satutation point of 90K at a pressure of ~ 10- Tpm. Hg in. the cryestat.
Approximately one-quarter liter of liquid.nitrogen'is required forcooling the,.
Card
- - ~,. .- w . - ~ -J
0
PIRZYBUL, La-nzek; CHODER"', Alfann; Gzeolawi BADYDA, Gyryl
-y, Toxicolo,ZYj Cardiovascular
--acolo
,
c Jour 'o- "c; 20, 10 ';o 94293
_,LU unoros, 'niczak,
P, o z if C', 0 "'T s'-,,: D", o ,,I L7. G, n-, N. Hia-
s z ow s k Ja
0 t F3 i v n.
h e Rc.-.-~Iits of Hj-jt_~rtu.-aic D - s s 'a i'-
Carbo;~~-=y-HydrLzinc~-P' thrlazinc-
Ori- Pub
.7-751.
P0131ki tye~od. I, el~, a r 19D7, 12, o 20
D Li t ra c t- 'I a a s t j 11 c a nd (,,!as t -o 11 c a rt c r i_n I p r cS ~,-U r o
16 out of 20 paticat's w it-h hjpc~rtoilic disca.~;_C; do-
r.-,,,t7.-jOTlt ('-hu dailly do-
cr_,aood. as a r~~ sult o i u
-ic repa was 60 1) -Li
L:ipro-
ca~xc of ti p 'ration s b
.
V-01 stun"~j 6f_hGalt`i ad sicop
a i,d 1 /2
P103516010001019100310,04
A076/A026
AUTHORS: Przybyl,.Wladyslaw, Director; Trybula, Henryk, Engineer
TITLE: The Pleszew Machine-Tool Plant,
PERIODICAL: Przeglad Mechaniczny, 196O.No. 19 20, PP. 591 593
TEXT: The authors describe the,production history ofthe Pleszewska Fabry-
ka Obrabiarek (Pleszew Machine-Tool Plant) and list a number of wood-working ma~
chines describing their operating Principles. The following types of wood-working
machines are produced by this plant: beading tool DFGA; pendulum saws PDe-5; cr014
PSWe;. circular saws TPSe; ribbon saws PTMe, PTe-7 and PTe-9; wood-
-turning lathes Types I DT and 3 DT; moulder spindle lathe FJe; drilling machines
LBSe; belt sanders Type SLNe; wood-turning machines DFGA and FJNe; chain saws
DRSA-63 multi-circular saws with mechanical- feed DPLA. The Plant produces 1,100
wood-working machines annually and exports to South Africa, Albania, Australia,.
Austria, Afghanistan, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burma, China, E~,,ypt, Hindustan,
Indonesia, Iran, Irak, Yugoslavia, Korea, Pakistan, GDR, West Germany, Turkey,
Uruguay, Hungary..and Vietnam. It is expected that the pord~ction will be increased
by 367% during 1960 1965, as comparedto the, 1,958 index. Labor efficiency: will
Card 1/2,
PROSINSKI, Stanislaw; PRZYBYLAK,,,.-A.n-toni
. I - - ,i ,
Poland/Microbiology. Microbes Pathogenic for Han and F
Animals
Abs Jour Ref Zhur-Biol.,-No 13, 19-581 57746
Author Forebsla
klicjV1,,Przybylkiewicz Z.7 Semburowa K
Inst, ,
Not given
Title Determination of.the Tosigenesis of Corynebactue-,
rium'diphtheriae in vitro
Orig Fub d. do'swiadIc
z., 1956?10t~*No 41,
:-Postepy hig. i me
' .
.
389 400
kbstract Two laye- rs of theProbisher medium.wpre poured.
, into a dish. The~first layer without serum was
used:to level the bottom of,the dis!'. After he.
first layer,conge-aled the second layer with 20%
horse serum was poured., in. k sterile paper strip,
1 5,-m) satu ated with diluted antitoxic serum.
r
(500 to 1000 active units in 1 ml) was submerged
~Card:1/3
Po land/Mic rob iology. P'licrobes Pathogenic for Ilar- and F
Animals.
kbs Jour Ref Zhur-Biol., No 13, 1958, 57746
kbstrpact into the second layer. The dishes were dried in
a.thermost-at for 1.5 to 2~hours, and the strains
under investigation were seeded in lines across
the paper or in "circles" on both-sides ofit,
'he results were evaluated 24,
1 48, and 72 hours
after being kept in a thermostat. Each'batch of
horse serum was tested for its lack of a'speci-
f ic antitoxin. The authors think that horse serum
is more suitable for this purpose than :.re ovine
or human serums. Considerablyworse results were
obtained when fresh sera were used tl,,,an wh n se-
ra,ke t for 14 days,at a temperature of 37,Were
p
used. NonGarbolized antitoxic serum DrOVidedbet-
ter results than did.the commercial carbolized.
The-authors tested 107.toxigenic diphtheria
,tr~iih~~) 4'? nontoxigenic, and-
Card 2/3
?2