Abdominal type of obesity is linked to risk factors of atherosclerosis and to metabolic diseases. 216 women, aged 17 to 67 years, mean age 43.1 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe hereditary form of colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome, cancer family syndrome "nonpolyposis hereditary colorectal cancer"), which is different from familial adenomatous polyposis, represents probably 5-8% of the development of this malignancy. The main characteristics of the syndrome include an autosomal dominant hereditary type, frequent familial occurrence of colorectal cancer (either solely at this site--Lynch variant I--or in combination with other, particularly gynecological sites of cancer-Lynch variant II), younger age at the time of diagnosis, more frequent localization in the right colon and more frequent occurrence of synchronic and metachronic cancer. During the years 1982-1992, we found 339 asymptomatic members of families meeting the criteria of the syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1982-1991 at the Fourth Medical Clinic 309 asymptomatic family members meeting the criteria of the hereditary form of colorectal carcinoma (Lynch syndrome--syndrome of familial cancer, also "non-polypous" hereditary colorectal carcinoma) which differs from familial polyposis (adenomatosis) of the colon. The syndrome is characterized by autosomal dominant heredity and by familial incidence of colorectal carcinoma (Lynch I) or colorectal carcinoma and carcinoma of other, in particular gynaecological areas (Lynch II) and a younger age of the affected subjects, a more frequent localization in the right colon, synchronous and metachronous neoplasia. In the authors group 34% were type I, the remainder type II.
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