Publications by authors named "Ming-Sung Chang"

Undetected micrometastasis may play a key role in the early relapse of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. The aim of this study was to detect circulating tumor cells (CTCs) for predicting early relapse of CRC patients by a weighted enzymatic chip array (WEnCA) and analyze 15 candidate genes associated with CRC carcinogenesis. The genes of 105 postoperative CRC patients were analyzed by membrane array and direct sequencing.

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Background: The melanoma-associated antigen (MAGE) gene family consists of different expression patterns in various tumor types. They are considered tumor-specific antigens and are ideal targets for cancer immunotherapy. The purpose of this study is to identify the expression profiles of the MAGE family genes in Taiwanese colorectal cancer patients.

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Chemotherapy is an important postsurgery adjuvant therapy in the treatment of breast cancer. However, because of the individual genotype differences of patients, the drug efficacy differs from person to person, even when the same chemotherapy drug is administered. The purpose of this research was to probe the gene expression profiles to predict the efficacy of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), the common drug used in chemotherapy for various type of cancers, in Taiwanese breast cancer patients.

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Pressafonin A (1) and pressafonin B (2), two new Michelia monoterpenic esters, have been isolated from Michelia compressa (Maxim.) Sargent var. formosana Kanehira (Magnoliaceae), and their structures are determined on the basis of spectroscopic analysis.

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Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-directed tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have been established as a treatment option in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Clinically, PCR and RFLP are commonly used to evaluate the efficacy of TKIs, and these methods require cancer tissues to proceed. In the event a peripheral blood test is able to replace current evaluation methods, a greater clinical application advantage may be achieved.

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Article Synopsis
  • A 61-year-old woman with a history of hysterectomy experienced intermittent abdominal pain and noticed a mass in her lower abdomen for 3 months.
  • Medical imaging, including X-rays and sonography, revealed a radiopaque mass with a unique curvilinear pattern and acoustic shadowing in the pelvic area.
  • Further tests, including a small-bowel series and CT scan, identified the mass as a spongiform object with a whirl-like appearance, indicating possible complications in her digestive system.
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Fifty-three patients with 38 cases of perforated appendicitis and 15 cases of appendicitis without perforation were evaluated based on the computed tomography (CT) appearances of appendiceal diameter, phlegmon, abscess, extraluminal air, appendiceal wall enhancement, lateroconal fascial thickening, appendicolith, bowel wall thickening, ascites, ileal wall enhancement, peritoneal enhancement, periappendiceal fluid, omental haziness, retrocecal appendix, intraluminal air, and the combination of intraluminal air and appendicolith. The result of appendiceal diameter was compared using two-sample Student's t test, and the other CT findings were analyzed by Fisher's Exact Test. Our results showed that appendix was larger in caliber in perforated appendix (P< .

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The purpose of this study is to review the computed tomography (CT) appearance of gastrointestinal tract (GI) perforation. Forty-two patients with 10 cases of proximal GI perforation and 32 cases of distal GI perforation were evaluated based on the CT findings of extraluminal air (which was subdivided into the CT-falciform ligament sign crossing the midline and scattered pockets of air), bowel wall thickening (>8 mm in gastroduodenal wall, >3 mm in the small bowel wall, >6 mm in the caliber of the appendix and >5 mm in the colonic wall), associated abscess formation, ascites and adjacent fat stranding. The results were compared using Fisher's Exact Test.

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