Search results for "Pathological"

showing 10 items of 443 documents

La Psichiatria e l'Information and Communication Technology (ICT): le risorse e i rischi

2007

Pathological Internet Use technostress realtà virtuale
researchProduct

Pathological gambling. Chinese community in Southern Italy

2011

Pathological gambling sense of community distress
researchProduct

Dysarthria and Pathological Laughter/Crying as Presenting Symptoms of Corticobasal- Ganglionic Degeneration Syndrome

2003

Pathological laughterDysarthriamedicine.medical_specialtyNeurologyNeurologyCryingmedicineNeurology (clinical)Degeneration (medical)medicine.symptomAudiologyPsychologyNeuroradiologyJournal of Neurology
researchProduct

Molecular mechanisms linking amyloid β toxicity and Tau hyperphosphorylation in Alzheimer׳s disease

2015

Neurofibrillary tangles (aggregates of cytoskeletal Tau protein) and senile plaques (aggregates mainly formed by amyloid β peptide) are two landmark lesions in Alzheimer׳s disease. Some researchers have proposed tangles, whereas others have proposed plaques, as primary lesions. For a long time, these were thought of as independent mechanisms. However, experimental evidence suggests that both lesions are intimately related. We review here some molecular pathways linking amyloid β and Tau toxicities involving, among others, glycogen synthase kinase 3β, p38, Pin1, cyclin-dependent kinase 5, and regulator of calcineurin 1. Understanding amyloid β and Tau toxicities as part of a common pathophys…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAmyloid beta-PeptidesbiologyChemistryKinaseNeurodegenerationTau proteinBACE1-AStau Proteinsmedicine.diseaseProtein Aggregation PathologicalBiochemistryBiochemistry of Alzheimer's diseaseAlzheimer DiseaseGSK-3Physiology (medical)mental disordersmedicinebiology.proteinCancer researchPIN1HumansSenile plaquesPhosphorylationFree Radical Biology and Medicine
researchProduct

Peripheral ameloblastoma of the upper gingiva: Report of a case and literature review

2014

According to the 2005 histological classification of odontogenic neoplasms by the World Health Organization, ameloblastoma is a benign, locally invasive epithelial odontogenic tumor of putative enamel organ origin. There are four distinct subgroups in which this neoplasm can be gathered: the solid/multicystic type, the unicystic type, the desmoplastic and the peripheral type. Peripheral ameloblastoma is believed to be the rarest subgroup, making up for 2 to 10% of all ameloblastomas. From its first description by Kuru in 1911 to date, less than 200 cases of PA have been described in literature. PAs commonly affect the mandible, in the maxilla the most common location is the soft palatal tis…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCase ReportOdontologíaAmeloblastoma; Oral Disease; Oral surgeryLesionAmeloblastomaOral surgeryPeripheral ameloblastomamedicineAmeloblastomaGeneral DentistryPathologicalOral DiseaseOral Medicine and Pathologybusiness.industryMandibleEnamel organOdontogenic tumormedicine.disease:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Ciencias de la saludstomatognathic diseasesMaxillaUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASmedicine.symptombusiness
researchProduct

Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency is unlikely to be a direct trigger of multiple sclerosis

2013

Abstract Background Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, a vascular pathology affecting the veins draining the central nervous system can accompany multiple sclerosis and is suspected to be involved in its pathogenesis. Objective This study was aimed at exploring a potential role for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency in triggering multiple sclerosis. If it were venous abnormalities responsible for neurological pathology, one should expect negative correlation, i.e. more severe vascular lesions in the patients with early onset of multiple sclerosis. Methods Localization and degree of venous blockages in 350 multiple sclerosis patients were assessed using catheter venography. …

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCentral nervous systemVenographyDiseaseAzygous veinPathogenesisMultiple sclerosisVenous malformationInternal medicinemedicinePathologicalJugular veinsmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMultiple sclerosisGeneral MedicinePhlebographymedicine.diseaseVenous insufficiencyChronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiencymedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyCardiologyNeurology (clinical)businessVenous malformationMultiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders
researchProduct

Solitary polypoid laryngeal xanthoma.

2013

We report the case of a 51-year-old male smoker with diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidaemia and a long history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection treated with various antiretroviral regimes, who was referred to the otolaryngology department with progressive dysphonia. Fibre-optic laryngoscopy showed a solitary, yellowish-white pedunculated polyp on the anterior third of the left cord, with no other abnormality. Pathological analysis revealed a polypoid laryngeal xanthoma that was immunoreactive against CD68, perilipin, and adipophilin. This unusual laryngeal lesion in the clinical context of our patient suggests a possible role of antiretroviral treatment…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCordmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryHepatitis C virusLaryngoscopyContext (language use)Case ReportGeneral MedicineXanthomamedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causelcsh:Otorhinolaryngologylcsh:RF1-547PathogenesisDiabetes mellitusMedicinebusinessPathologicalCase reports in otolaryngology
researchProduct

Tissue Versus Liquid Biopsy: Opposite or Complementary?

2017

The main pillar of cancer diagnosis has been classically represented by the cyto-/histopathological analysis of cells and tissues. The detection of morphological features of cellular atypia (e.g., altered nuclear/cytoplasmic area ratio; nuclear dysmorphism) and disarranged hierarchical architecture of the tissue (i.e., dysplasia) are funding elements in the diagnosis of malignancies, yet the pieces of information conveyed by these features are often insufficient for the precise identification of a specific cancer histotype, and sometimes they prove faulty [1–6].

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyDysplasiabusiness.industryHistopathological analysismedicinePillarCancerArea ratioLiquid biopsymedicine.diseasebusinessCellular atypia
researchProduct

Primary glioblastomas with and without EGFR amplification: Relationship to genetic alterations and clinicopathological features

2009

Glioblastomas express a notable heterogeneity in both the histological and cell patterns with glial astrocytic differentiation. Primary glioblastoma, which is the most frequent presentation (90-95%), occurs mainly in older patients and arises de novo, without any clinical or histological evidence of a less malignant precursor lesion. EGFR amplification has been identified as a genetic hallmark of primary glioblastomas and occurs in 40-60% of cases. However, there exist primary glioblastomas without EGFR amplification/overexpression. The purpose of this study was to stabilize the association between cases with and without EGFR gene amplification with clinical and genetic parameters in 45 cas…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyEGFR AmplificationCellGeneral MedicineBiologyTp53 mutationmedicine.diseasePathology and Forensic Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureOlder patientsCancer researchmedicinebiology.proteinClinicopathological featuresMdm2EGFR Gene AmplificationNeurology (clinical)neoplasmsGlioblastomaNeuropathology
researchProduct

CD15 – A new marker of pathological villous immaturity of the term placenta

2014

Abstract Introduction Idiopathic immaturity is one of the main reasons for latent placental insufficiency and antenatal hypoxia. Postnatal identification of the immature placental phenotype may help early stratification of a heterogeneous population of newborns and individually identify risk of disease in the immediate postnatal life. The aim of the study was to determine the relevant diagnostic markers associated with pathological placental immaturity. Methods 111 tissue samples from normal and pathological term placentas with persisting villous immaturity comprised the comparative immunohistochemical study (CD15, CD34). Positive immunohistochemical reactions were quantitatively assessed i…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyEndotheliumLewis X AntigenAntigens CD34Placental insufficiencyBiologyPregnancyChronic VillitisFetal macrosomiamedicineHumansPathologicalPlacental villous immaturityAsphyxiaObstetrics and GynecologyHypoxia (medical)FucosyltransferasesPlacental Insufficiencymedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicineCase-Control Studiesembryonic structuresImmunologyFemalemedicine.symptomBiomarkersDevelopmental BiologyPlacenta
researchProduct