Background: We aimed to determine and compare the in vitro effects of autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) and mesenchymal stem cell supernatant (MSC-Sp) on the wound healing capacity of equine corneal fibroblasts using a scratch assay.
Methods: Bone marrow aspirates and eyes were collected from normal, euthanized horses with subsequent isolation and culture of BM-MSCs and corneal stromal cells. Corneal stromal cells were culture-expanded in the culture well of transwell plates and then treated with an autologous BM-MSC suspension (dose: 2.
A 3-year-old castrated male mixed-breed dog presented with an acute bullous retinal detachment and thickened choroid of the right eye. Subretinal cytology revealed an atypical cell proliferation suggestive of neoplasia. The eye was enucleated, and the original diagnosis was a histologically benign choroidal melanocytic tumor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To determine the significance of Aspergillus and Fusarium spp., as identified by culture, on clinical outcome in equine keratomycosis.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of 66 horses (66 eyes) evaluated at the NCSU-VH diagnosed with keratomycosis from which Aspergillus or Fusarium spp.
A video-based computerized semiautomated image analysis system was applied to the diagnostic evaluation of 119 sediments of voided urine: 103 from patients with a broad variety of neoplastic and nonneoplastic disorders of the lower urinary tract and 16 normal controls. Each specimen was presented to the machine as a single cytocentrifuge preparation, preserved in 2% Carbowax in 50% ethanol and stained-by the Papanicolaou method. Five hundred sequential "objects" were scanned within an area of 9 sq mm on each slide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytologic examination of the sediment of voided urine is the only noninvasive method of detection, diagnosis and follow-up of tumors of the bladder and other anatomic components of the lower urinary tract. In order to assess the value of cytology of voided urine, we analyzed the diagnostic yield in 203 episodes, each composed of three sediments of voided urine obtained on consecutive days. For each one of these episodes, histologic material was available and was reviewed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlow cytometric analysis (FCM) of DNA content of nuclei was performed on simultaneously obtained tissue samples and needle aspirates from 37 primary colorectal cancers and from 21 other tumors. There was a marked increase in the proportion of the nondiploid cell population in 18 of 58 aspirates when compared with the corresponding tissue samples, presumably because of selective aspiration of tumor cells. The difference was significant at level alpha much less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe diagnostic performance of six human observers with various degrees of experience was tested against the diagnosis developed by consensus and by an automated, computer-generated cell-classification system. The study was based on randomly selected photographs of 200 urothelial cells, classified in groups of 50 as negative, atypical, suspicious and malignant, from smears of urine sediment. The performance of the human observers was tested in three separate sessions at suitable time intervals and evaluated by two analytical statistical techniques: the weighted kappa proposed by Cohen, to evaluate the degree of disagreement, and the log-linear analysis of association.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Quant Cytol
June 1984
Human polyomavirus (HPV)-infected cells in the urinary sediment are characterized by large homogeneous basophilic nuclear inclusions, which may mimic the nuclear changes in urothelial cancer. The virus is composed of double-stranded DNA and produces intense green fluorescence of nuclei stained with acridine orange. DNA measurements of Feulgen-stained smears of urinary sediment disclosed that HPV-infected cells have aneuploid DNA values and could not be differentiated from cancer cells on the basis of DNA content alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroscopic analysis of cells in the sediment of voided urine is the principal noninvasive method of diagnosing and detecting cancer of the lower urinary tract, mainly the bladder. The sediments contain several populations of cells of unequal diagnostic value. By applying a system of hierarchic classification to the computer analysis of digitized cell images, we were able to eliminate from diagnostic consideration cells that are difficult to classify, such as degenerated cells, multinucleated cells, cell clusters, renal tubular cells and cells infected by the human polyomavirus.
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