29 research outputs found

    Super Typhoon Bopha and the Mayo River Debris-Flow Disaster, Mindanao, Philippines, December 2012

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    Category 5 (C5) Super Typhoon Bopha, the world’s worst storm of 2012, formed abnormally close to the West Pacific Equator, and Bopha’s Mindanao landfall has the record equatorial proximity for C5 storms. Bopha generated a debris flow that buried 500 ha of New Bataan municipality and killed 566 people. New Bataan, established in 1968, had never experienced super typhoons and debris flows. We describe the respective histories of New Bataan and Super Typhoon Bopha; debris flows; and how population growth and unwise settlement practices contribute to Philippine “natural” disasters. The historical record of Mindanao tropical cyclones yields clues regarding how climate change may be exacerbating near-equatorial vulnerability to typhoons. Existing models of future typhoon behavior do not apply well to Mindanao because they evaluate only the tropical cyclones that occur during the main June–October typhoon season, and most Mindanao tropical cyclones occur in the off season. The models also ignore tropical depressions, the most frequent—and commonly lethal—Mindanao cyclones. Including these in annual tallies of Mindanao cyclones up to early 2018 reveals a pronounced and accelerating increase since 1990. Mindanao is susceptible to other natural hazards, including other consequences of climate change and volcanic activity

    Frequent loss of expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27(Kip1) in estrogen-related Endometrial adenocarcinomas.

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    Social and Physical Environments and Disparities in Risk for Cardiovascular Disease: The Healthy Environments Partnership Conceptual Model

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    The Healthy Environments Partnership (HEP) is a community-based participatory research effort investigating variations in cardiovascular disease risk, and the contributions of social and physical environments to those variations, among non-Hispanic black, non-Hispanic white, and Hispanic residents in three areas of Detroit, Michigan. Initiated in October 2000 as a part of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences’ Health Disparities Initiative, HEP is affiliated with the Detroit Community–Academic Urban Research Center. The study is guided by a conceptual model that considers race-based residential segregation and associated concentrations of poverty and wealth to be fundamental factors influencing multiple, more proximate predictors of cardiovascular risk. Within this model, physical and social environments are identified as intermediate factors that mediate relationships between fundamental factors and more proximate factors such as physical activity and dietary practices that ultimately influence anthropomorphic and physiologic indicators of cardiovascular risk. The study design and data collection methods were jointly developed and implemented by a research team based in community-based organizations, health service organizations, and academic institutions. These efforts include collecting and analyzing airborne particulate matter over a 3-year period; census and administrative data; neighborhood observation checklist data to assess aspects of the physical and social environment; household survey data including information on perceived stressors, access to social support, and health-related behaviors; and anthropometric, biomarker, and self-report data as indicators of cardiovascular health. Through these collaborative efforts, HEP seeks to contribute to an understanding of factors that contribute to racial and socioeconomic health inequities, and develop a foundation for efforts to eliminate these disparities in Detroit

    Role of computed quantitation of immunohistochemical staining of Ki-67 antigen in diagnosing ampullary lesions.

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    OBJECTIVE: To determine the possible role of Ki-67 antigen expression by visual and computed quantitation in diagnosing ampullary lesions. STUDY DESIGN: Twenty-two cases of ampullary lesions treated at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital between 1989 and 1994 were analyzed. Four cases of adenoma, 4 of epithelial dysplasia in adenoma, 7 of well-differentiated adenocarcinoma and 7 of high grade adenocarcinoma were included. For each case three consecutive sections were obtained from the paraffin-embedded blocks. The first slide was stained with hematoxylin & eosin for visual diagnosis; the other two were immunoprocessed to evaluate the expression of Ki-67 antigen. Visual quantitation of Ki-67 was evaluated by light microscopy, and computed quantitation was performed utilizing the SAMBA 4000 cell image analysis system. RESULTS: Immunohistochemical analysis of the ampullary lesions showed a positive correlation of Ki-67 expression, both by visual and computed quantitation, with biologic grade. The cell proliferation sequence was carcinoma, adenoma with dysplasia and adenomia. CONCLUSION: Ki-67 antigen expression correlated highly with the progression of malignancy in ampullary lesions. Computed quantitation of Ki-67 was more sensitive than visual quantitation, especially in differentiating between low and high grade adenocarcinomas

    Expression of cell cycle-regulated proteins pRB2/p130, p107, E2F4, p27, and pCNA in salivary gland tumors: prognostic and diagnostic implications.

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    The retinoblastoma family consists of the tumor suppressor nuclear phosphoprotein pRb/p105 and related proteins p107 and pRb2/p130. Recent immunohistochemical studies of the retinoblastoma family of proteins in lung and endometrial cancer and choroidal melanomas show a tight inverse correlation between the histologic grading in the most aggressive tumor types and pRb2/p130 expression. This led us to investigate the role of pRb2/p130 in salivary tumors. We studied the expression of pRb2/p130, p107, E2F4, p27, and PcNA by immunohistochemistry in a panel of 44 salivary gland tumors. We found a direct correlation between the cytoplasmic expression of pRb2/p130 and tumor grading and the presence of metastasis that was highly statistically significant (P < 0.001). Additionally, increased cytoplasmic pRb2/p130 expression was significantly correlated with a decreased probability of survival (P < 0.001). Interestingly, p107 nuclear expression showed a strong direct correlation when compared with the same variables. pRb2/p130 showed the highest percentage of undetectable nuclear levels in the specimens examined and the tightest inverse correlation (P < 0.0001) with both the histologic grading and pCNA expression in malignant salivary tumors. Additionally, E2F4 showed an identical localization pattern as to that of pRb2/p130. These data suggests an important role for pRb2/p130 in the pathogenesis and progression of certain salivary gland cancers
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