11 research outputs found

    SERUM FERRITIN - A TUMOR-MARKER FOR RENAL-CELL CARCINOMA

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    Serum ferritin levels in 32 patients with renal cell carcinoma were evaluated preoperatively and postoperatively. Serum ferritin concentration was significantly higher in renal cell carcinoma patients compared to controls (259.10 versus 61.30 ng./ml., p < 0.001). Furthermore, there was a steady and statistically significant increase in serum ferritin levels with advancing disease stage, as well as a significant decrease in serum ferritin levels after nephrectomy for stages 1 and 2 disease. The intracellular content of ferritin as estimated by polyclonal antibody was dramatically increased in renal cancer tissue compared to normal parenchyma. Although serum ferritin regulation is complex and only partly understood, the present study suggests that serum ferritin may be a useful tumor marker for renal cell carcinoma

    Autopsies in the elderly: Erzurum study

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    WOS: 000415602200023PubMed ID: 28926821Introduction: Clinical and forensic autopsies are the best methods for determining cause of death. The aim of this study was to determine demographic and etiologic characteristics in geriatric forensic cases analyzed in Erzurum, Turkey. Materials and methods: Autopsy reports and prosecution documents of decedents aged 65 and older autopsied in the Morgue Specialization Department of the Forensic Medicine Institute, Erzurum Division between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2015 were screened retrospectively. Results: The study included 399 subjects with a mean age of 74.38 +/- 7.28 years. A large proportion of the subjects were in the young and middle old age group (n = 218, 54.63%) and male (n = 286, 71.68%). Autopsy was performed on 198 (49.62%) of the subjects, cause of death was determined by post-mortem external examination in 199 (49.87%), and documents were unavailable for 2 subjects. Cause of death was determined as natural in 130 (32.58%) of the decedents and unnatural in 269 (67.42%). The most common natural cause of death was cardiovascular disease (n = 94, 76.4%). Unnatural causes of death included accident in 223 (82.90%), suicide in 25 (9.30%) and homicide in 21 (7.80%) of the decedents. A large proportion of the accidents were traffic accidents (n = 120, 53.80%). The most common method of committing suicide was hanging (n = 15, 60%), whereas homicides were most often committed by blunt force trauma (n = 9, 42.86%). Conclusion: Our data are consistent with the literature, allowing for some variation based on regional sociocultural characteristics. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd and Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine. All rights reserved

    Deep sequencing of BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutations in chronic myeloid leukemia patients with resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors

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    Tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy is the current treatment of choice for patients with chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) leading to rapid and durable hematological as well as molecular responses. However, emergence of resistance to TKIs has been the major obstacle to treatment success on long term. In this regard kinase domain mutations are the most common mechanism of therapy failure. In this study, we analyzed peripheral blood samples from 17 CML patients who had developed resistance to various TKIs by using next-generation sequencing parallel to Sanger sequencing. BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutations have been found in 59% of the cohort. Our results demonstrate that next-generation sequencing results in a higher mutational detection rate than reported with conventional sequencing methodology. Furthermore, it showed the clonal diversity more accurately

    Abusive Head Trauma in Turkey and Impact of Multidisciplinary Team Establishment Efforts on Case Finding and Management: Preliminary Findings

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    Aim: Abusive head trauma (AHT) is the most common cause of death as the result of child abuse. A task force is planned to provide training on AHT to professionals in different disciplines on clinical presentation, diagnostic workup, and organization of multidisciplinary evaluation at the hospital and community levels. This study reports on the preliminary findings of the pre-intervention phase of a larger study

    Abusive Head Trauma in Turkey and Impact of Multidisciplinary Team Establishment Efforts on Case Finding and Management: Preliminary Findings

    No full text
    Aim: Abusive head trauma (AHT) is the most common cause of death as the result of child abuse. A task force is planned to provide training on AHT to professionals in different disciplines on clinical presentation, diagnostic workup, and organization of multidisciplinary evaluation at the hospital and community levels. This study reports on the preliminary findings of the pre-intervention phase of a larger study
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