Publications by authors named "L Gergely"

The authors present a case of 1st trimester miscarriage where an early, complete hydatidiform mole was clinically suspected. Histopathological and immunohistochemical analyses excluded a complete mole, but the histomorphological profile was in concordance with a partial hydatidiform mole. Genetic analysis excluded a partial mole based on biparental genome composition, where further genetic analyses detected trisomy of chromosome 16.

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Despite the availability of many novel therapies for multiple myeloma, it remains an incurable disease with relapse fated in almost all patients. In the era of modern agents, second autologous stem cell transplantation still holds its role in patients relapsing after first-line autologous transplant. The authors reviewed a single-center experience with a second auto-SCT for relapsed multiple myeloma.

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Article Synopsis
  • * AEL is characterized by specific genetic changes, including multi-allelic mutations, and can develop after treatments like chemotherapy and stem cell transplants, as seen in two case studies.
  • * Several potential mechanisms for AEL's development post-treatment are proposed, including the presence of abnormal stem cells, survival of mutated cells after chemotherapy, and new mutations arising from treatment-related complications.
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The co-occurrence of myasthenia gravis (MG) and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is rare; only one case has been published so far. We report a 63-year-old Caucasian female patient who was diagnosed with MG at the age of 43. Thymoma was also detected, and so it was surgically resected, which resulted in reasonable disease control for nearly 20 years.

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Background: Abortion and fetal death are common in fetuses with holoprosencephaly, so genetic examinations often have to be made in a post-mortem setting. The efficiency of the conventional karyotyping using cultured fibroblasts in these situations is limited due to frequent culture failure. In the current study, archived cases of holoprosencephaly, where post-mortem genetic evaluation was requested and sufficient frozen material was available, were reevaluated using the quantitative fluorescence polymerase chain reaction (QF-PCR) technique.

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