31 research outputs found

    Emergency laparoscopy in patients with multiple trauma

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    Urothelial dysplasia and carcinoma in situ of the bladder

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    Urothelial cells were pepsin-extracted from paraffin-embedded specimens taken from human nontumorous bladder mucosa, dysplasia, and carcinoma in situ. After Feulgen staining for DNA, nuclei were measured with an integrating microdensitometer. The measurements show that normal urothelium consists mostly of diploid nuclei. Dysplasia means that there is a predominance of tetraploid DNA values, whereas carcinoma in situ is characterized by a high percentage of aneuploid cells. In both dysplasia and carcinoma in situ there is a considerable percentage of diploid nuclei. Thus, DNA cytophotometry can be used for standardization of preneoplastic and early stages of tumor development in bladder cancer

    Primary hepatocellular carcinoma with hepatitis B virus infection in a 16-year-old noncirrhotic patient

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    Primary hepatocellular carcinoma metastasizing to abdominal lymph nodes and to the left lung was observed in a 16-year-old male patient. No clinically apparent chronic liver disease preceded the carcinoma and no signs of cirrhosis were detectable in the nonneoplastic liver. Hepatitis B surface antigen, hepatitis B e antigen and antibody to hepatitis B core antigen were found to be positive in the serum. By immunohistochemistry (peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique) hepatitis B surface antigen could be demonstrated in the nontumorous liver parenchyma, but not in the primary hepatocellular carcinoma itself. Serum alpha-fetoprotein was only moderately elevated (75 ng/ml), but immunohistochemically primary hepatocellular carcinoma revealed a considerable number of alpha-fetoprotein-containing cells, whereas nontumorous parenchyma did not. Carcinoembryonic antigen could be demonstrated immunohistochemically in some tumor cells of a lymph node metastasis, but not in the primary tumor or in the nontumorous liver parenchyma. We propose that primary hepatocellular carcinoma developed in this case in a symptomless hepatitis B virus carrier without preceding cirrhosis, an we exclude a simultaneous acute hepatitis B
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