30 research outputs found

    Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration

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    Over the past 3 decades, fine needle aspiration (FNA) has developed as the most accurate and cost-effective initial method for guiding the clinical management of patients with thyroid nodules. Thyroid FNA specimens containing follicular-patterned lesions are the most commonly encountered and include various forms of benign thyroid nodules, follicular carcinomas, and the follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma. Based primarily upon the cytoarchitectural pattern, FNA is used as a screening test for follicular-patterned lesions to identify the majority of patients with benign nodules who can be managed without surgical intervention. The terminology and reporting of thyroid FNA results have been problematic due to significant variation between laboratories, but the recent multidisciplinary NCI Thyroid FNA State of the Science Conference has provided a seven-tiered diagnostic solution. A key element of this approach is the category “atypical cells of undetermined significance” (ACUS) which is used for those aspirates which cannot be easily classified as benign, suspicious, or malignant. Lesions in this category represent approximately 3–6% of thyroid FNAs and have a risk of malignancy intermediate between the “benign” category and the “suspicious for a follicular neoplasm” category. The recommended follow-up for an ACUS diagnosis is clinical correlation and in most cases, repeat FNA sampling

    sj-docx-1-pie-10.1177_09544089231166654 - Supplemental material for A modified approach on modeling-design-optimization procedure for cutting of pure titanium using wire electric discharge machining (WEDM)

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-pie-10.1177_09544089231166654 for A modified approach on modeling-design-optimization procedure for cutting of pure titanium using wire electric discharge machining (WEDM) by YM Baytok, L Aydin, HA Deveci and EA Gültürk in Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part E: Journal of Process Mechanical Engineering</p

    Characterization of the cellular response during apoptosis induction in cadmium-treated Hep G2 human hepatoma cells

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    WOS: 000186725500005PubMed ID: 14645995Cadmium is a toxic transition heavy metal of continuing occupational and environmental concern, with a wide variety of adverse effects on regulation of gene expression and cellular signal transduction pathways. Injury to cells by cadmium leads to a complex series of events that can culminate in the death of the cell. It has been reported that cadmium induces apoptosis in many cell lines. However, the morphological characteristics leading to apoptosis or subsequent regeneration in cells exposed to cadmium have not been clarified. We evaluated whether human hepatoma cells maintained in culture undergo apoptosis when exposed to cadmium. Cytotoxic activity of cadmium on Hep G2 cells determined using 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5diphenyltetrazolium bromide assay. A DNA ladder assay was performed by electrophoresis. Cell cycle analysis was quantified by flow cytometry. Nuclear morphology was studied by fluorescence microscopy after staining with propidium iodide and Hoechst 33342. Morphologic alterations in culture hepatocytes treated with CdCl2 were observed by transmission electron microscopy. We have demonstrated that apoptosis is a major mode of elimination of damaged HepG2 cells in cadmium toxicity and it precedes necrosis

    Biochemical and morphological characteristics of selenite-induced apoptosis in human hepatoma Hep G2 cells

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    WOS: 000222566900003PubMed ID: 15235139Selenium is a cellular growth inhibitor in many mammary tumor cells. To comprehend the mechanism for the selenium-induced cell death, we examined the effects of sodium selenite, which has been one of the most extensively investigated selenium compounds, in human hepatoma Hep G2 cells. Cell viability gradually decreased after treatment with sodium selenite within the concentration range of 10-50 muM. Low (10 muM) selenite has shown a high-percentage laddering pattern compared to the high (25 muM) cytotoxic selenium concentration in agarose gel electrophoresis. G(2)/M-phase enrichment was also concentration dependent. The most consistent transmission electron microscopic finding was the existence of large lysosomes. Based on these data, we hypothesize that sodium selenite predominantly shows its apoptotic effect over hydrogen selenite accumulation

    Intranasal Microemulsion of Sildenafil Citrate: In Vitro Evaluation and In Vivo Pharmacokinetic Study in Rabbits

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    The purpose of the present study was to prepare intranasal delivery system of sildenafil citrate and estimate its relative bioavailability after nasal administration in rabbits to attain rapid onset of action with good efficacy at lower doses. Sildenafil citrate saturated solubility was determined in different solvents, cosolvents, and microemulsion systems. For nasal application, sildenafil citrate was formulated in two different systems: the first was a cosolvent system (S3) of benzyl alcohol/ethanol/water/Transcutol/taurodeoxy cholate/Tween 20 (0.5:16.8:47.7:15.9:1:18.1% w/w). The second was a microemulsion system (ME6) containing Oleic acid: Labrasol/Transcutol/water (8.33:33.3:16.66:41.66% w/w). The prepared systems were characterized in relation to their clarity, particle size, viscosity, pH, and nasal ciliotoxicity. In vivo pharmacokinetic performance of the selected system ME6 (with no nasal ciliotoxicity) was evaluated in a group of six rabbits in a randomized crossover study and compared to the marketed oral tablets. The targeted solubility (>20 mg/ml) of sildenafil citrate was achieved with cosolvent systems S1, S3, and S5 and with microemulsion systems ME3–ME6. The saturated solubility of sildenafil citrate in cosolvent system S3 and microemulsion system ME6 were 22.98 ± 1.26 and 23.79 ± 1.16 mg/ml, respectively. Microemulsion formulation ME6 showed shorter tmax (0.75 h) and higher AUC(0-∞) (1,412.42 ng h/ml) compared to the oral tablets which showed tmax equals 1.25 h and AUC(0-∞) of 1,251.14 ng h/ml after administration to rabbits at dose level of 5 mg/kg. The relative bioavailability was 112.89%. In conclusion, the nasal absorption of sildenafil citrate microemulsion was found to be fast, indicating the potential of nasal delivery instead of the conventional oral administration of such drug
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