28 research outputs found

    Hemangiopericytoma in the Small Intestine: A Case Report

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    Hemangiopericytoma is a rare tumor, mostly composed of pericytes of ramified appearance that are normally found all along the venules and capillaries. An 18-year-old female was admitted on March 17, 1997 to the Department of Infectious Diseases for fever, chills and failure to thrive. Physical examination revealed a palpable tumorous mass in the iliac region on the right. The patient was transferred to the Department of Surgery. Vaginal examination and echotomography of the abdomen and pelvis minor were performed and revealed the presence of an irregular, inhomogeneous tumorous formation of 8 cm in diameter in the pelvis minor, differentially diagnostic right ovary, i.e. acute adnexitis or perityphlitic tumor. After that, small intestine resection, tumor excision in toto, and appendectomy were performed on April 16, 1997. Pathohistological diagnosis was hemangiopericytoma and chronic appendicitis. The biological behavior of this tumor is difficult to predict on the basis of clinical and morphological parameters. In our patient, local tumor excision was not followed by adjuvant therapy. After ten years, the patient is well, healthy and a mother of two healthy children

    Detecting Latin-Based Medical Terminology in Croatian Texts

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    No matter what the main language of texts in the medical domain is, there is always an evidence of the usage of Latin-derived words and formative elements in terminology development. Generally speaking, this usage presents language-specific morpho-semantic behaviors in forming both technical-scientific and common-usage words. Nevertheless, this usage of Latin in Croatian medical texts does not seem consistent due to the fact that diferent mechanisms of word formation may be applied to the same term. In our pursuit to map all the diferent occurrences of the same concept to only one, we propose a model designed within NooJ and based on dictionaries and morphological grammars. Starting from the manual detection of nouns and their variations, we recognize some word formation mechanisms and develop grammars suitable to recognize Latinisms and Croatinized Latin medical terminology

    Antiretroviral activity of 5-azacytidine during treatment of a HTLV-1 positive myelodysplastic syndrome with autoimmune manifestations

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    Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are often accompanied by autoimmune phenomena. The underlying mechanisms for these associations remain uncertain, although T cell activation seems to be important. Human T-lymphotropic virus (HTLV-1) has been detected in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes, mostly in regions of the world which are endemic for the virus, and where association of HTLV-1 with rheumatological manifestation is not rare. We present here the case of a 58 year old man who presented with cytopenias, leukocytoclastic vasculitis of the skin and glomerulopathy, and was diagnosed as MDS (refractory anemia with excess blasts - RAEB 1). The patient also tested positive for HTLV-1 by PCR. After 8 monthly cycles of 5-azacytidine he achieved a complete hematologic remission. Following treatment, a second PCR for HTLV-1 was carried out and found to be negative. This is the first report in the literature of a HTLV-1-positive MDS with severe autoimmune manifestations, which was treated with the hypomethylating factor 5-azacitidine, achieving cytogenetic remission with concomitant resolution of the autoimmune manifestations, as well as HTLV-1-PCR negativity. HTLV-1-PCR negativity may be due to either immune mediated clearance of the virus, or a potential antiretroviral effect of 5-azacytidine. 5-azacytidine is known for its antiretroviral effects, although there is no proof of its activity against HTLV-1 infection in vivo

    Residual substantia nigra neuromelanin in Parkinson's disease is cross-linked to alpha-synuclein

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    The pigmentation of substantia nigra pars compacta dopaminergic neurons is due to the presence of neuromelanin, an irregular macromolecular pigment belonging to the family of melanins. Depletion of neuromelanin in Parkinson's disease is typically indicated by loss of brown color in this area. Unlike that from controls, the pigment extracted from substantia nigra of parkinsonian patients seems to be mainly composed by highly cross-linked, protease-resistant proteic material and the neuromelanin macromolecule appears to be a minor presence. In the present paper we describe the isolation by SDS-PAGE of this proteic component after cleavage of the melanin backbone under solubilizing conditions. A single band is observed, which has been identified as \u3b1-synuclein by western blotting. As expected, the same process performed on a control specimen did not show occurrence of any major proteic component. Nevertheless, extraction from a 91 years old control with Lewy bodies displayed minor \u3b1-synuclein immunoreactive aggregates, whereas inclusion of free \u3b1-synuclein was not observed at all. Results reported here support the view that \u3b1-synuclein accumulates within substantia nigra neurons and is entrapped in pigment granules during neuromelanin biosynthesis, i.e. before the melanin depletion characteristic of Parkinson's disease starts

    Sullivan au solstice. Les Saisons Sullivan, de Françoise Sullivan et Marion Landry avec une postface de Louise Déry. Galerie de l’UQAM, 91 p.

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    The influence of monomeric and micellar concentrations of the cationic monomeric, dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB), and the corresponding dimeric, bis(N, N-dimethyl-N-dodecyl) ethylene-1,2-diammonium dibromide (12-2-12), surfactants on the formation and transformation of amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) was investigated. The combination of microscopy (AFM and TEM) and light scattering techniques (size and zeta potential measurements) enabled, for the first time, the simultaneous monitoring of the effect that additives exert on different length scales during CaP formation in solution - from prenucleation clusters and ACP particles to the crystalline phase. Depending on their aggregation state (monomers or micelles) and the geometry of the aggregate (spherical or elongated micelles), DTAB and 12-2-12 have exhibited different effects on the rate of ACP transformation, as well as on the morphology of the amorphous and crystalline phases. It was shown that the effect of surfactants on the precipitation process observed on the microscale could be a result of different pathways on the nanoscale. The obtained results may have implications for the understanding of the general mechanism of inorganic-organic interactions underlying the biomineralization processes, as well as for materials science
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