Publications by authors named "M C Siciliano"

Purpose: Assessing the long-term impact of cancer on people's lives is challenging due to confounding issues such as aging and comorbidities. We aimed to investigate this impact by comparing the outcomes of cancer survivors with a matched control cohort.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional survey of breast, colorectal and ovarian cancer survivors approximately 5 years post-diagnosis and a cohort of age, sex and social deprivation-matched controls who had never had a cancer diagnosis.

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In this Letter we report on effects of nucleon-nucleon correlations probed in nucleon transfer reactions with heavy ions. We measured with high efficiency and resolution a complete set of observables for neutron transfer channels in the ^{206}Pb+^{118}Sn system employing a large solid angle magnetic spectrometer, which allowed us to study a wide range of internuclear distances via a detailed excitation function. The coupled channel theory, based on an independent particle transfer mechanism, follows the experimental transfer probabilities for one- and two-neutron pick-up and stripping channels.

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Background And Purpose: 'Neurovascular coupling' (NVC) alterations, assessing the interplay between local cerebral perfusion and neural activity within a given brain region or network, may reflect neurovascular unit impairment in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The aim was to explore NVC as a correlation between the functional connectivity and cerebral blood flow within the large-scale resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging brain networks in a sample of ALS patients compared to healthy controls (HCs).

Methods: Forty-eight ALS patients (30 males; mean age 60.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hepatoid thymic carcinoma (HTC) is a rare tumor that looks similar to liver cancer, specifically found in the thymus gland, and a new case has been identified in a 40-year-old man with polycythemia vera.
  • This case involved advanced analysis of the tumor's molecular profile, noting the presence of various proteins through immunohistochemistry and significant mutations identified via whole exome sequencing.
  • The study suggests that HTC may represent an evolutionary shift in tumor characteristics, combining features of both thymic carcinoma and hepatoid tumors, indicated by the unique mutation patterns found in the cells.
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