Publications by authors named "Caslin A"

The advent of air nanobubbles (ANBs) has opened up a wide range of commercial applications spanning industries including wastewater treatment, food processing, biomedical engineering, and agriculture. The implementation of electric field-based air nanobubbles (EF-ANBs) irrigation presents a promising approach to enhance agricultural crop efficiency, concurrently promoting environmentally sustainable practices through reducing fertilizer usage. This study investigated the impact of EF-ANBs on the germination and overall growth of agricultural crops in soil.

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Previous investigations suggest that DL-3-n-butylphthalide (NBP) is a promising multifaceted drug for the treatment of stroke. It is not clear whether NBP can treat traumatic brain injury (TBI) and what could be the mechanisms of therapeutic benefits. To address these issues, TBI was induced by a controlled cortical impact in adult male mice.

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Background: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects many children and juveniles. The pathogenesis of ASD is not well understood. Environmental factors may play important roles in the development of ASD.

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Aim: To determine interobserver and intra-observer agreement in the assessment of cytological grade and intraduct necrosis in pure duct carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast.

Methods: Sixty unselected cases with illustrated diagnostic criteria were circulated to 19 practising histopathologists.

Results: Overall agreement was moderate for cytological grade in three categories: 71% agreement; weighted kappa (kappa w), 0.

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The present study involves an immunohistochemical analysis of p53 protein expression in head and neck tumours located at two separate subsites, the larynx and hypopharynx. It attempts to relate differences in expression to differences in the behaviour of these tumours. Detection of the p53 protein was performed using immunohistochemistry on 32 specimens of hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma and 35 specimens of laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma.

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We describe the case of a 68-year-old woman who presented with asymptomatic skin nodules and symptoms of anaemia, and was found to have acute megakaryoblastic leukaemia with fibrosis, a condition now believed to correspond to the former diagnosis of acute myelofibrosis. There is only one previous report of skin lesions developing in this condition.

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Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma has a relatively good prognosis but treatment may be at the expense of function and quality of life. Various host and tumour parameters have been studied in an attempt to predict the course of the disease but without success. It has been hoped that laboratory based methods, particularly those based on molecular biology, may prove more useful.

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Some 497 of 3085 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck treated between 1963 and 1990 had a later radical neck dissection at some time after initial treatment. The histological slides were all reviewed, firstly to confirm the presence of squamous cell carcinoma within the neck, and secondly to ascertain whether the metastasis was to soft tissue, to a lymph node or to both. The presence of extracapsular rupture in lymph node deposits was also assessed.

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The aim of the study was to see if there was any correlation between the histopathology, ultrastructure, pulmonary endocrinology and clinical manifestations of end-stage primary pulmonary hypertension. Twenty patients undergoing heart-lung transplantation for the disease were studied. The nature and duration of symptoms and signs, results of haematological, electrocardiographic, radiographic, echocardiographic and haemodynamic studies, and the response of patients to vasodilators were compared with data from histopathological and ultrastructural study of lungs removed at transplantation.

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Over the years many laboratory factors have been studied with a view to predicting the course of head and neck cancer. The lack of success prompted the application of various measures of cell kinetics to this topic. The present study includes 79 patients with a proven squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck at various sites and having various treatments.

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This paper describes the application of fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) performed on 92 patients with salivary gland lesions in a Head and Neck Surgery Clinic. The aspirates were immediately reported by a cytopathologist and the reports conveyed to the surgeon during the same clinic visit. FNAC results were then compared with histology in those patients who underwent surgery and with the clinical course of the disease at subsequent clinic visits in patients where surgery was not performed.

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The expression of the cell-cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin has previously been shown to be reduced in poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck and absent in nodal metastases. Twenty-eight patients with previously untreated squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, 22 of whom had nodal metastases at presentation, were investigated for E-cadherin expression using the monoclonal antibody 6F9, specific for human E-cadherin. Reduced expression was seen in the poorly differentiated primary tumours, compared with well differentiated tumours, but this trend was not statistically significant.

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We report a series of 3,294 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck seen by one of us between 1963 and 1990. Two thousand and seven patients had a histologically proven and graded, but previously untreated, squamous cell carcinoma of the mucosal surfaces of the head and neck. These tumors had been graded previously by many different pathologists in many different hospitals, both in the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as continental Europe, over this period.

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A group of Wistar albino rats was injected subcutaneously with monocrotaline to induce vasoconstrictive hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease characterized by medial hypertrophy of small pulmonary arteries, the appearance of muscular pulmonary arterial vessels of arteriolar dimensions (less than 20 microns) in diameter), and exudative changes in the lung parenchyma. The vascular abnormalities were quantified by measuring the percentage medial thickness of small pulmonary arteries, the number of muscular pulmonary arterial vessels below 20 microns in diameter per cm2 of lung section and by determining the smallest arterial vessels in each case showing muscularity. A second group of rats was born in a decompression chamber and kept in hypobaric hypoxia for a month of the neonatal period, developing hypoxic hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease as a consequence.

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The lungs from 16 cases of plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy obtained at heart-lung transplantation, half of which had primary pulmonary hypertension, were examined by electron microscopy. From these the probable pathogenesis of pulmonary arterial intimal fibrosis in plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy was deduced. The earliest detectable change was migration of smooth muscle cells from the media, through the internal elastic lamina into the intima.

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A detailed histopathological study was made of the lungs of 36 cases of plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy coming to combined heart-lung transplantation. It revealed two dissimilar processes involved in the pathogenesis of this disease. One comprised histological appearances consistent with constriction of muscular pulmonary arteries, a condition that would be likely to be reversed by pulmonary vasodilators.

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A study was made of the number of pulmonary endocrine cells, immunoreactive for gastrin-releasing peptide (bombesin) or calcitonin, in the terminal bronchioles of 39 cases of pulmonary vascular disease. In 25 of these, the form of vascular disease was plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy, primary in 12 and secondary in 13, while the remaining 14 subjects had a wide range of other varieties of hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease. We found that pulmonary endocrine cells, especially those containing bombesin, were increased in number in both the primary and secondary forms of plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy but not in other varieties of pulmonary hypertension.

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