J Gastrointestin Liver Dis
December 2024
Colonic leiomyoma is extremely rare and is endoscopically indistinguishable from gastrointestinal stromal tumor. We present a case of colonic leiomyoma disguised as a pedunculated colonic polyp in a 62-year-old male who underwent surveillance colonoscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteases are an important class of enzymes, whose activity is central to many physiologic and pathologic processes. Detailed knowledge of protease specificity is key to understanding their function. Although many methods have been developed to profile specificities of proteases, few have the diversity and quantitative grasp necessary to fully define specificity of a protease, both in terms of substrate numbers and their catalytic efficiencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphology of Gleason 4 prostate cancer (PCa) can be subdivided into cribriform and non-cribriform patterns. A large body of evidence has shown that pattern 4 cribriform PCa (especially non-glomeruloid type) is associated with adverse pathologic features and clinical outcomes compared with non-cribriform pattern 4 PCa. The underlying mechanisms for the aggressiveness of cribriform PCa are not fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Electroanal Chem (Lausanne)
March 2018
Electrical stimulation of tissues has many uses in pain management, antibacterial treatment, and wound healing. The electric field stimulates epidermal migration and increases fibroblast cell proliferation. Here we show the effects of electrical field (EF) stimulation of human dermal fibroblasts (HDF) on the expression of collagen, elastin, and collagenase (MMP1; matrix metalloproteinase 1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParagangliomas are rare neoplasms that arise from the chromaffin cells of the autonomic nervous system. Although paragangliomas can occur anywhere paraganglia are present, they tend to occur in the head, neck, and retroperitoneum. Rarely, paragangliomas can occur in the peripancreatic area and present as a pancreatic mass, creating a diagnostic challenge for the clinician, radiologist, and pathologist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 58 year old male with a history of cirrhosis (hepatitis B and C), a long smoking history, and a recently diagnosed high-grade transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder wall presented three days after a biopsy procedure with abdominal pain, nausea, and new hypoxemia on room air. The chest radiograph was clear and the CT angiogram showed only a borderline large pulmonary artery, two small nodules (3mm and 4mm) in the right middle lobe of the lung, and emphysematous changes throughout the lung parenchyma. There was no evidence of pulmonary embolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a unique case of a 26 year-old female non-smoker who expired following treatment for presumed pneumonias. At autopsy, lepidic predominant adenocarcinoma with aerogenous spread of mucin without evidence of invasion, a rare diagnosis that previously would have fallen under the umbrella of "bronchioloalveolar carcinoma," was found. Histopathology showed mucin-secreting neoplastic cells lining the alveolar walls, as well as exfoliated and dense aggregates of mucinous debris filling the alveoli.
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