Search results for "progress"
showing 10 items of 1620 documents
Circulating cathepsin K and cystatin C in patients with cancer related bone disease: clinical and therapeutic implications.
2007
Abstract The clinical significance of serum cathepsin K and cystatin C was assessed in patients with breast cancer (BCa) or prostate cancer (PCa) with confined disease (M0) or bone metastasis (BM). Cathepsin K and cystatin C circulating levels were determined by ELISAs in 63 cancer patients, in 35 patients with nonmalignant diseases and in 42 healthy blood donors (control group). In BCa patients, cathepsin K serum levels were significantly lower than in sex matched control group (HS; p = 0.0008) or in patients with primary osteoporosis (OP; p = 0.0009). On the contrary, cystatin C levels were significantly higher in BCa patients than in HS ( p = 0.0001) or OP ( p = 0.017). In PCa patien…
Preserved knowledge maps of countries: Implications for the organisation of semantic memory
2004
We describe two patients with selectively preserved knowledge of the category of countries. Following a series of cerebra infarcts, patient DB presented with severe perceptual impairment, including dense apperceptive agnosia, prosopagnosia, an topographical agnosia. Despite these deficits, he could effortlessly name countries from their outline maps. Patient WH, who suffered from semantic dementia, had severe naming and comprehension difficulties, with extremely sparse residual semantic knowledge. Remarkably, the category of countries was preserved. First, we argue that, for both patients, this category preservation occurs at a semantic level. Second, we discuss our findings in the context …
Role of Chemokines in Melanoma Progression
2011
Metastasis is the main cause of death from melanoma. Chemokines are low molecular weight chemotactic cytokines that facilitate cellular migration. Thus, cells that express receptors for a given chemokine are attracted to the site of its production. As certain chemokines are found in abundance in organs that are common targets of metastasis and receptors for these chemokines are expressed by tumor cells, it was hypothesized that chemokine gradients might selectively facilitate metastasis to these organs. A later finding that these chemokines were produced by tumor cells, with evidence of autocrine effects, obliged the modification of that hypothesis. Many chemokines are also known to have op…
Analysis of parathyroid graft rejection suggests alloantigen-specific production of nitric oxide by iNOS-positive intragraft macrophages
2009
Abstract Background During acute rejection of organ or tissue allografts T cells and macrophages are dominant infiltrating cells. CD4-positive T cells are important for the induction of allograft rejection and macrophages are important effector cells mediating cytotoxicity via production of nitric oxide (NO) by the inducible NO-synthase (iNOS). In the present study we analysed whether the destruction of primarily nonvascularised parathyroid allografts is also mediated by iNOS-positive macrophages. Methods Hypocalcaemic Lewis rats received parathyroid isografts (from Lewis donors) and allografts (from Wistar Furth donors), respectively, under the kidney capsule. Levels of serum calcium above…
Serum pancreatic enzymes in human immunodeficiency virus-infected children - A collaborative study of the Italian Society of Pediatric Gastroenterolo…
1998
Numerous studies have shown pancreatic disease in adult human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, but there are very few reports on pediatric patients. Our aim was to determine the prevalence of increased serum pancreatic enzyme levels and their relationship to clinical manifestations of acute pancreatitis in HIV-infected children.Forty-seven consecutive, symptomatic HIV-infected children (24 male; median age, 7.3 years; range, 1-17 years) and 45 sex- and age-matched controls without gastroenterologic disease were enrolled. In all subjects serum total amylase, pancreatic amylase, and lipase were assayed with commercial kits. The following were recorded: disease progression (CDC …
Transcriptomic Changes Following Partial Depletion of CENP-E in Normal Human Fibroblasts
2021
The centromere is a fundamental chromosome structure in which the macro-molecular kinetochore assembles and is bound by spindle microtubules, allowing the segregation of sister chromatids during mitosis. Any alterations in kinetochore assembly or functioning or kinetochore–microtubule attachments jeopardize chromosome stability, leading to aneuploidy, a common feature of cancer cells. The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) supervises this process, ensuring a faithful segregation of chromosomes. CENP-E is both a protein of the kinetochore and a crucial component of the SAC required for kinetochore–microtubule capture and stable attachment, as well as congression of chromosomes to the metaphas…
2 years in the life of COPD patients: Evolution of GOLD 2011 classification in the 'real-life' DACCORD study
2016
Introduction Limited data are available on the progression of COPD categorised according to GOLD 2011. We analysed data from the ongoing, non-interventional, observational DACCORD study and compared baseline GOLD 2011 categorisation with that of 1 and 2-years after inclusion. Methods Patients with a diagnosis of COPD were recruited into DACCORD following either a change or initiation of maintenance medication. Baseline exacerbations data (collected over 6 months) were annualised for GOLD categorisation at baseline; COPD symptoms were evaluated using the COPD Assessment Test (CAT) at baseline as well as the 1 year and 2 year visit. Data on exacerbations were collected every 3 months up to 2 …
Late Breaking Abstract - Relationship between clinical features and mortality in a cohort of COPD patients
2021
Background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a progressive disease with poor outcomes, including a high mortality. GULP is a multicenter Italian study that described clinical characteristics, exacerbation rates and survival of a cohort of COPD patients, as part of AstraZeneca’s AvoidEX program. Aims and objectives: To evaluate whether the clinical profile of subjects enrolled in the GULP study predicts mortality on a period of 3 years. Methods: Post-hoc analysis of an observational, multicenter, retrospective study. Patients were stratified according to survival status: alive (A) and dead (D). Clinical characteristics, comorbidities and exacerbation rates were reported in the…
MS4A12 is a colon-selective store-operated calcium channel promoting malignant cell processes.
2008
AbstractUsing a data mining approach for the discovery of new targets for antibody therapy of colon cancer, we identified MS4A12, a sequence homologue of CD20. We show that MS4A12 is a cell surface protein. Expression analysis and immunohistochemistry revealed MS4A12 to be a colonic epithelial cell lineage gene confined to the apical membrane of colonocytes with strict transcriptional repression in all other normal tissue types. Expression is maintained upon malignant transformation in 63% of colon cancers. Ca2+ flux analyses disclosed that MS4A12 is a novel component of store-operated Ca2+ entry in intestinal cells. Using RNAi-mediated gene silencing, we show that loss of MS4A12 in LoVo co…
MYCN gain and MYCN amplification in a stage 4S neuroblastoma.
2003
Abstract Stage 4S neuroblastoma is a disease associated with spontaneous regression and good survival. We present a patient whose evolution has shown the variety and complexity of this disease in infants. Biologic factors, such as ploidy, MYCN copy number, loss of 1p36, and other chromosomal gains and losses were determined. A complex pattern of genetic abnormalities, such as near-diploidy, MYCN gain (2–4 copies per haploid genome) and imbalance/deletion of 1p36 was seen in the diagnostic sample. An extensive disseminated disease after a latent period of 26 months was associated with a special genetic evolution, such as tetraploidy, MYCN amplification (2:100–500 copies), 1p36 deletion, and …