827 research outputs found
Successful role of adjuvant radiotherapy in a rare case of tracheal inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor: a case report
BACKGROUND::
Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) is a rare benign cancer that can express a more aggressive phenotype related to the genetic mutation of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase receptor (ALK). Involvement of trachea is extremely rare and due to the clinical and radiologic nonspecificity, the definitive diagnosis is based on the histologic evaluation of tissue specimens. Total surgical excision is curative and chemotherapy or radiotherapy has been employed in the treatment of unresectable tumors or as adjuvant therapies.
CASE PRESENTATION::
The case described here is being reported because of the rare tracheal location and the atypical treatment approach used for an ALK-positive IMT. A 7-week pregnant woman voluntary interrupted pregnancy and underwent total surgical excision that resulted to have close margins. Although ALK-positive expression indicated the use of ALK inhibitors, she refused any type of adjuvant therapy that could affect ovarian function. Thus, 3D conformational external beam radiotherapy was performed with a daily dose of 180 cGy, 5 times per week, up to 45 Gy at the level of trachea. A total of 62 months of follow-up showed and no signs of disease recurrence or late radiation therapy-related toxicity.
CONCLUSIONS:
This report describes an extremely rare case of a tracheal IMT, underlying the key role of radiotherapy as adjuvant treatment able to definitively cure IMT, limiting systemic chemotherapy-related toxicity
BIRD: Watershed Based IRis Detection for mobile devices
Communications with a central iris database system using common wireless technologies, such as tablets and smartphones, and iris acquisition out of the field are important functionalities and capabilities of a mobile iris identification device. However, when images are acquired by means of mobile devices under uncontrolled acquisition conditions, noisy images are produced and the effectiveness of the iris recognition system is significantly conditioned. This paper proposes a technique based on watershed transform for iris detection in noisy images captured by mobile devices. The method exploits the information related to limbus to segment the periocular region and merges its score with the iris' one to achieve greater accuracy in the recognition phase
The Influence of Subjective Perceptions and the Efficacy of Objective Evaluation in Soccer School Playersâ Classification: A Cross-Sectional Study
Integrated Imaging and Spectroscopic Analysis of Painted Fresco Surfaces Using Terahertz Time-Domain Technique
Terahertz time-domain (THz-TD) imaging plays an increasingly significant role in the study
of solid-state materials by enabling the simultaneous extraction of spectroscopic composition and
surface topography in the far-infrared region (3â300 cm^-1). However, when applied to works of
art in reflection configuration, significant challenges arise, including weak signal intensity, multiple
signal losses, and surface distortion. This study proposes a practical solution to overcome these
limitations and conducts an integrated imaging and spectroscopic analysis on painted fresco surfaces,
allowing for the retrieval of surface thicknesses, material distribution, and pigment spectroscopic
signals. The study addresses the issue of surface geometrical distortion, which hampers the accurate
determination of the THz phase signal. By tackling this challenge, this work successfully determines
the absorption coefficient for each point on the surface and retrieves spectroscopic signatures.
Additionally, the temporal deconvolution technique is employed to separate different layers of the
sample and differentiate between outer and inner surface topography. The objective of this study is to
demonstrate the advantages and limitations of THz-TD imaging in determining surface thicknesses,
material distribution, and pigment spectroscopic signals. The results obtained highlight the potential
of THz-TD imaging in investigating painted works of art, offering new possibilities for routine
analysis in the field of cultural heritage preservation
Recent Developments in Climate Justice
Climate justice can be defined generally as addressing the disproportionate burden of climate change impacts on poor and marginalized communities. It seeks to promote more equitable allocation of these burdens at the local, national, and global levels through proactive regulatory initiatives and reactive judicial remedies that draw on international human rights and domestic environmental justice theories. Yet, efforts to define climate justice as a field of inquiry remain elusive and underinclusive; a recent book, Climate Justice: Case Studies in Global and Regional Governance Challenges (ELI Press 2016), seeks to fill that void by providing an overview of the landscape of climate justice from a variety of legal and geographic perspectives. On March 10, 2017, ELI convened the bookâs editor and three contributing authors to discuss current developments. Below, we present a transcript of the seminar, which has been edited for style, clarity, and space considerations
Highly sensitive alpha-fetoprotein, Lens culinaris agglutinin-reactive fraction of alpha-fetoprotein and des-gamma-carboxy prothrombin for hepatocellular carcinoma detection
Incidental Finding in Pre-Orthodontic Treatment Radiographs of an Aural Foreign Body: A Case Report
The presence of foreign bodies in the external auditory canal of young patients may cause,
if left untreated, severe permanent damage to the adjacent anatomical structures, and infections. A
10âyearâold patient with an intellectual disability underwent orthodontic evaluation. An aural
radiopaque finding was visible in the lateral cephalogram and in the orthopantomography. The
patientâs mother reported that her son never showed any ear discomfort, except for a mild hearing
impairment that was never investigated. The patient was referred to an ear, nose and throat (ENT)
specialist that removed the foreign body located in the left external auditory meatus. The careful
evaluation of dental radiographs, including preâorthodontic and interim orthodontic radiographs,
may help to identify silent incidental findings that may otherwise lead to severe complications if
left untreated
Sigma-2 receptor agonist derivatives of 1-Cyclohexyl-4-[3-(5-methoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalen-1-yl)propyl]piperazine (PB28) induce cell death via mitochondrial superoxide production and caspase activation in pancreatic cancer
Abstract
Background
Despite considerable efforts by scientific research, pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer related mortalities. Sigma-2 receptors, which are overexpressed in several tumors, represent promising targets for triggering selective pancreatic cancer cells death.
Methods
We selected five differently structured high-affinity sigma-2 ligands (PB28, PB183, PB221, F281 and PB282) to study how they affect the viability of diverse pancreatic cancer cells (human cell lines BxPC3, AsPC1, Mia PaCa-2, and Panc1 and mouse Panc-02, KCKO and KP-02) and how this is reflected in vivo in a tumor model.
Results
Important cytotoxicity was shown by the compounds in the aggressive Panc02 cells, where cytotoxic activity was caspase-3 independent for four of the five compounds. However, both cytotoxicity and caspase-3 activation involved generation of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS), which could be partially reverted by the lipid antioxidant \u3b1-tocopherol, but not by the hydrophilic N-acetylcysteine (NAC) indicating crucial differences in the intracellular sites exposed to oxidative stress induced by sigma-2 receptor ligands. Importantly, all the compounds strongly increased the production of mitochondrial superoxide radicals except for PB282. Despite a poor match between in vitro and the in vivo efficacy, daily treatment of C57BL/6 mice bearing Panc02 tumors resulted in promising effects with PB28 and PB282 which were similar compared to the current standard-of-care chemotherapeutic gemcitabine without showing signs of systemic toxicities.
Conclusions
Overall, this study identified differential sensitivities of pancreatic cancer cells to structurally diverse sigma-2 receptor ligands. Of note, we identified the mitochondrial superoxide pathway as a previously unrecognized sigma-2 receptor-activated process, which encourages further studies on sigma-2 ligand-mediated cancer cell death for the targeted treatment of pancreatic tumors
Quantitation of HBV cccDNA in anti-HBc-positive liver donors by droplet digital PCR: A new tool to detect occult infection
Background & Aims: The accurate diagnosis of occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection (OBI) requires the demonstration of HBV DNA in liver biopsies of hepatitis B surface antigen-negative individuals. However, in clinical practice a latent OBI is deduced by the finding of the antibody to the hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc). We investigated the true prevalence of OBI and the molecular features of intrahepatic HBV in anti-HBc-positive individuals.
Methods: The livers of 100 transplant donors (median age 68.2 years; 64 males, 36 females) positive for anti-HBc at standard serologic testing, were examined for total HBV DNA by nested-PCR and for the HBV covalently closed circular DNA (HBV cccDNA) with an in-house droplet digital PCR assay (ddPCR) (Linearity: R2 = 0.9998; lower limit of quantitation and detection of 2.4 and 0.8 copies/105 cells, respectively). Results: A total of 52% (52/100) of the individuals studied were found to have OBI. cccDNA was found in 52% (27/52) of the OBI- positive, with a median 13 copies/105 cells (95% CI 5â25). Using an assay specific for anti-HBc of IgG class, the median antibody level was significantly higher in HBV cccDNA-positive than neg- ative donors (17.0 [7.0â39.2] vs. 5.7 [3.6â9.7] cut-off index [COI], respectively, p = 0.007). By multivariate analysis, an anti-HBc IgG value above 4.4 COI was associated with the find- ing of intrahepatic HBV cccDNA (odds ratio 8.516, p = 0.009); a lower value ruled out its presence with a negative predictive value of 94.6%.
Conclusions: With a new in-house ddPCR-based method, intra- hepatic HBV cccDNA was detectable in quantifiable levels in about half of the OBI cases examined. The titer of anti-HBc IgG may be a useful surrogate to predict the risk of OBI reactiva- tion in immunosuppressed patients
- âŠ