Background: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a condition that begins in childhood but can continue into adulthood, and may be the cause of many disadaptive behaviors, as in the case of homeless people, who often display a high incidence of personality disorders. The goal of this study is to analyze the comorbidity of ADHD with axis II disorders in a Spanish homeless population.
Results: The outcomes show high comorbidity between these two kinds of disorders, and that the prevalence of axis II disorders is higher among people with ADHD than among the general population.
Background: Only 2% to 4% of patients with melanoma will be diagnosed with gastrointestinal metastasis during the course of their disease. The most common sites of gastrointestinal metastases from melanoma include the small bowel (35%-67%), colon (9%-15%) and stomach (5%-7%), with a median survival of 6-10 months after surgery, and 18% survival at five years. Metastatic melanoma to the gallbladder is extremely rare and it is associated with a very poor prognosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Clin Cancer Res
September 2006
Merkel cell carcinoma is an aggressive skin cancer, with a significant incidence of locoregional lymphnode involvement, which requires timely diagnosis, adequate staging and aggressive therapy based essentially on surgical procedures. The aim of this study is to report our experience and to compare our results with literature findings, in order to discuss the role of the procedures adopted and their influence on prognosis. From July 1995 to April 2005, 14 patients were treated and followed-up for MCC in the National Cancer Institute of Naples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMerkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare, malignant skin cancer, exhibiting neuroendocrine differentiation, with a significant incidence of locoregional lymph nodal involvement (40%-73%). The accepted staging system classifies MCC as: stage I, localized skin disease; stage II, regional lymph node disease; stage III, metastatic disease. The clinical differentiation of stage I and II patients is difficult and understaging is frequent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is, in its most frequent presentation, a moderately aggressive neoplastic disease. It can, however, present in a moltitude of clinico-pathological variants, some of which are characterized by a more malignant attitude. It is important to determine which tumors, among the various histophenotypes, are high risk in order to establish the appropriate treatment and follow-up.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA selective pattern of metastasis, not accountable by a simple mechanical trapping mechanism, is exhibited by many primary tumors and appears to be controlled by properties of both the tumor cell and the host organ. This organotropism may be regulated, in part, by the migration of an invading tumor cell toward chemotactic factors present in the extracellular matrix which may be released as a result of proteolytic digestion. To test this hypothesis we have examined 4 M guanidine extracts of liver extracellular matrix, prepared by high salt extraction, for organ-specific chemotactic activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetastasis to distant sites is mediated by various receptors on the surface of tumor cells. B16-F1 melanomas surviving 43.5 degrees C heat in vitro for 15 minutes and cultured for 10 days bind significantly increased amounts of the basement membrane protein laminin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe preferential colonization of a distant organ by a circulating tumor cell (organ specific metastasis) may be regulated by chemotactic factors present within the extracellular matrix of the host organ. Organ-specific extracellular matrix was prepared from murine kidney and lung by high salt extraction and DNAase/RNAase digestion. A soluble protein fraction (S2) from each of the matricies was obtained by 4 M guanidine extraction and was tested for organ-specific chemotactic activity in a modified Boyden chamber.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors evaluated the results of a study using clindamycin phosphate plus gentamicin in short-term therapy in patients with tumors submitted to surgery for removal of the primary lesion. Only 6.6% of these patients became infected, and these good results are most likely due to the synergic activity of clindamycin with the physiological immune response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe skin of Xenopus laevis contains a soluble beta-galactoside-binding lectin with a approximately 16,000-mol-wt subunit. It resembles similar lectins purified from a variety of tissues from other vertebrates, and differs from two other soluble X. laevis lectins from oocytes and serum that bind alpha-galactosides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBoth immature and adult rat lungs contain three prominent soluble beta-galactoside-binding proteins with subunit Mr approximately 14,500, 18,000, and 29,000 rather than only the one noted previously. They are readily resolved by ion-exchange chromatography, and antibodies raised against them show little cross-reaction. The three proteins were also found in immature heart, skeletal muscle, and liver, but only the protein with subunit Mr approximately 14,500 was found in these tissues in young adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new technique of selective intracarotid infusion is reported. This method involves the common and external carotid subcutaneous transposition. The advantages of this method are described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn affinity-purified antibody preparation raised against a beta-galactoside-binding lectin from bovine lung was used to localize a similar lectin in rat lung by immunofluorescence and by electron microscopy after on-grid staining visualized with colloidal gold conjugated second antibody. The endogenous mammalian lectin was found in smooth muscle cells and squamous alveolar epithelial (type I) cells and was concentrated extracellularly in elastic fibers of pulmonary parenchyma and blood vessels. The extracellular localization of this lectin suggests that it, like others, functions by interaction with extracellular glycoconjugates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoluble lectins of chicken, rat, frog, and the cellular slime mold, Dictyostelium discoideum, were purified and specific antibodies raised against these proteins were used to immunohistochemically localize the lectins in and around the tissues in which they were synthesized. Within cells, some of these soluble lectins (chicken-lactose-lectin-II in intestinal goblet cells, discoidin II in prespore cells) appear to be concentrated within vesicles whereas others (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Biol
September 1982
A membrane fraction (MF2) has been purified from isolated microvilli of the MAT-C1 subline of the 13762 rat mammary ascites adenocarcinoma under conditions which cause F-actin depolymerization. This membrane preparation contains actin as a major component, although no filamentous structures are observed by transmission electron microscopy. Membranes were extracted with a Triton X-100-containing actin-stabilizing buffer (S buffer) or actin-destabilizing buffer (D buffer).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrovilli, slender projections approximately 0.1 micrometer in diameter which occur on the surfaces of many cell types, are bounded by plasma membrane except at the site of attachment to the cell body and contain microfilament bundle cores. The presence of both microfilaments and plasma membrane suggests the use of microbilli for investigations of membrane cytoskeleton interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe finding of a nuclear antigen by anticomplement immunofluorescence in cells treated with cytosine-arabinoside after infection of Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV), opens a new approach to the problem of the role of this virus in certain human cancers. Complement-fixing tests of HSV markers with cancer and control human sera as well as with hyperimmune guinea pig antisera are discussed, suggesting another parameter for studies of squamous cell carcinomas. The finding of HSV antigens in selected tumors as the expression of repressed viral genome proves a continuing release of virus specific message and supports the important role of the virus in the development of the tumor.
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