5 research outputs found

    Contrast-tuneable microscopy for single-shot real-time imaging

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    A novel real image in-line laser holography enables a tuneable image contrast, edge sharpness, and visualization of sub-wavelength structures, using a simple pair of filters and large-diameter lenses that can incorporate higher-order scattered light. Demonstrated also are the accuracy in object sizing and the ease of imaging along the focal depth, based on a single-shot imaging via holographic principle. In addition, the use of broad, collimated laser beam for irradiation has led to a wider field of view, making it particularly useful for an extensive monitoring of, and sweeping search for, cells and microbial colonies and for the real-time imaging of cancer-cell dynamics

    Gastric Invasive Micropapillary Carcinoma with Intestinal Phenotypes Harboring a TP53 R175H Mutation

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    We report a case of gastric invasive micropapillary carcinoma (IMPC) in an 86-year-old female patient. She was admitted to our hospital with a chief complaint of bloody emesis. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy found a gastric adenocarcinoma at the antrum. The biopsy specimens showed moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma with invasive small tumor nests. Distal gastrectomy with systematic lymph node dissection demonstrated that the tumor had IMPC through a pathological examination. Despite the depth of tumor invasion (the submucosa), extensive lymph node metastases were observed. Anti-D2-40 immunostaining revealed numerous infiltrating tumor cell nests in the lymphatic vessels, which could explain subsequent multiple lymph node metastases. The adenocarcinoma showed intestinal phenotypes by several immunohistochemical studies. One of these antibodies (CD10) clearly demonstrated the inverted apical-basal (inside-out) pattern of IMPC, whereas it showed an ordinary pattern in intestinal metaplasia adjacent to the tumor. Furthermore, genetic analysis by direct sequencing revealed a point mutation in the exon 5 of TP53 in the tumor. The mutation presumably harbors a missense mutation from Arg to His at the codon 175 (R175H). R175H has been previously described as a ‘gain-of-function' mutation with a high invasive or metastatic potential in several types of cancers. In summary, this is one of the first reported cases of gastric IMPC with intestinal phenotypes harboring a TP53 R175H mutation in the literature
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