Transethosomes, classified as 3rd generation nanocarriers, have gained global acclaim due to their profound potential in addressing diverse medical conditions. Their superior dermal penetration, attributed to essential constituents, such as edge activators and alcohol, sets them apart from other nanoformulations. The current review article embarks with an introduction followed by a comprehensive exploration of transethosome structures, differentiating them from fellow nanocarriers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article describes the birth and development of the Renal Immunopathology Group of the Italian Society of Nephrology. It collects the stories of nephrologists and pathologists who, since the early Seventies up to the first decade of this century, devoted their professional lives to the study of renal pathology with a strong personal involvement, characterized by enthusiasm, commitment, ability, strong spirit of cooperation, and friendship. All this enabled the Group to: propose the criteria for a standardized histological and immuno-histological examination of renal biopsies and reporting; produce several multicenter studies, whose results were also published in important international journals; to set up a national registry of renal biopsies; to organize a number of courses, some of which were associated with the publication of monographs, on various renal diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To investigate impact of Yoga and Music Intervention on anxiety, stress, and depression levels of health care workers during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Methods: This study was conducted to assess psychological responses of 240 healthcare workers during COVID-19 outbreak. We used Yoga and Music Intervention in normal and abnormal subjects based on Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale-42 (DASS-42).
Endometriosis of surgical scars is a rare complication of caesarean sections (incidence: 0.03-0.4%) and other surgical procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCD44 is a transmembrane adhesion glycoprotein, functioning as a hyaluronan receptor and participating in the uptake and degradation of hyaluronan. Recently, CD44 has been proposed in the adult kidney as a marker of activated glomerular parietal epithelial cells, the putative niche stem cells that, in case of damage to podocytes, might migrate inside the glomerular tuft and undergo transition to podocytes. Here, immunoreactivity for CD44 was tested in 18 human fetuses and newborns with a gestational age ranging from 11 to 39 weeks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: As epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is involved in the pathogenesis of malignant pleural mesotheliomas (MPMs), the anti-EGFR drugs may be effective in treating MPM patients. Mutations of the EGFR gene or its downstream effectors may cause constitutive activation leading to cell proliferation, and the inhibition of apoptosis and metastases. Consequently, molecular profiling is essential for select patients with MPM who may respond to anti-EGFR therapies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutation analysis of KRAS is needed before starting treatment with anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC). In most of the cases, testing is performed on primary tumors, assuming that KRAS mutation status does not change in metastasis although correlation studies gave conflicting results. We evaluated the KRAS status concordance rate between primary tumors and related metastasis using a highly sensitive molecular assay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMUC1 is a transmembrane glycoprotein, apically expressed in most epithelial cells, used in the differential diagnosis of carcinomas and for discrimination of tumors of non-epithelial origin showing epithelioid features. Little attention has been paid so far though, on its possible significance in embryonic tissues. A preliminary study from our group revealed MUC1 expression in the cap mesenchymal cells during human nephrogenesis, suggesting a role for MUC1 in the process of mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
October 2012
An emerging hypothesis from the recent literature explain how specific adverse factors related with growth retardation as well as of low birth weight (LBW) might influence renal development during fetal life and then the insurgence of hypertension and renal disease in adulthood. In this article, after introducing a brief overview of human nephrogenesis, the most important factors influencing nephron number at birth will be reviewed, focusing on the "in utero" experiences that lead to an increased risk of developing hypertension and/or kidney disease in adult. Since nephrogenesis in preterm human newborns does not stop at birth, but it continues for 4-6 weeks postnatally, a better knowledge of the mechanisms able to accelerate nephrogenesis in the perinatal period, could represent a powerful tool in the hands of neonatologists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
October 2012
The identification of the different cell types involved in human nephrogenesis, when solely based on morphology, may lead to errors in its interpretation, given the complexity of the histological picture of the fetal and of the newborn kidney. In this study, the most recent works utilizing immunohistochemistry for the identification of the multiple cell types involved in human nephrogenesis are reviewed. The role of WT1, MUC1, Thymosin beta 10, Thymosin beta 4, CD10 and CD44 in the different phases of glomerulogenesis and of tubulogenesis is here described, with particular emphasis on their expression in the early phases of nephrogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene mutational analysis is critical for guiding the treatment of lung adenocarcinoma. In everyday clinical practice, EGFR testing is frequently centralized in referral laboratories that may receive paucicellular cytologic specimens, often fixed in various ways. We conducted a search for EGFR mutations in 108 cytologic samples of lung adenocarcinoma from different hospitals using the TheraScreen EGFR29 kit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic kidney disease (CKD) represents a major health burden. Its central feature of renal fibrosis is not well understood. By exome sequencing, we identified mutations in FAN1 as a cause of karyomegalic interstitial nephritis (KIN), a disorder that serves as a model for renal fibrosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExtra-osseous Ewing sarcomas/peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors (EOES/pPNETs) are high-grade malignant tumors found in various organs, such as the lung, skin, intestine, kidney and female genital tract; however, to the best of our knowledge, only two cases have previously been identified in the thyroid gland. We describe a case of primary EOES/PNET of the thyroid gland in a 66-year-old man with a previous history of large B cell lymphoma. During a routine follow-up examination, the patient underwent an ultrasound cervical scan showing a solid nodule of the left thyroid lobe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
July 2012
CD10 was first identified in tumor cells of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Most studies on CD10 expression have dealt with tumor pathology. Since no data are available for specific role in the fetal kidney, this study aimed at investigating CD10 expression during the different phases of renal embryogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The development of the human kidney is a complex process requiring interactions between epithelial and mesenchymal cells. The condensed cap mesenchyme is hypothesized to generate a population of stem/progenitor cells that undergo mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET) originating nephrons. Few immunohistochemical markers are available for detecting cap mesenchymal cells in the early phases of MET.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWilms Tumor 1 (WT1) is a zinc finger protein, expressed by human podocytes in the adult kidney, which plays a relevant role in different phases of nephrogenesis in experimental animals. Since no data are available for specific role in the human fetal kidney, this study aimed at investigating the expression of WT1 during the different phases of nephrogenesis. To this end, the expression of WT1 was evaluated in the kidneys, from four human fetuses and two newborns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of the human kidney is a complex process that requires interactions between epithelial and mesenchymal cells, eventually leading to the coordinated growth and differentiation of multiple highly specialized stromal, vascular, and epithelial cell types. The application of molecular biology and immunocytochemistry to the study of cell types involved in renal morphogenesis is leading to a better understanding of nephrogenesis, which requires a fine balance of many factors that can be disturbed by various prenatal events in humans. The aim of this paper is to review human kidney organogenesis, with particular emphasis on the sequence of morphological events, on the immunohistochemical peculiarities of nephron progenitor populations and on the molecular pathways regulating the process of mesenchymal to epithelial transition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: To assess the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) and conventional cytology in identifying bile duct stricture malignancies.
Methods: Brushing samples were collected from 64 patients by means of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, and assessed cytologically and by means of a multi-probe FISH set. The cytological diagnoses were: positive, negative and suspicious, whereas criteria for FISH positivity were: more than five polysomic cells or more than 10 trisomic cells for chromosomes 3 or 7.
Vertical transmission of JC virus and BK virus has been investigated by few authors, with conflicting results. We performed a combined serological and genomic study of 19 unselected pregnant women and their newborns. Blood and urine samples were collected during each gestational trimester from the pregnant women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a 42-year-old woman who presents a few days after a spontaneous incomplete abortion at the ninth week of pregnancy with hypertension and nephrotic syndrome. Curettage findings and increased values for the β subunit of human chorionic gonadotrophin were suspicious for a trophoblastic disease. A uterine placental site trophoblastic tumor was diagnosed 2 months later after hysterectomy and treated successfully using chemotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGiven the conflicting results of the few published studies, the aim of this retrospective molecular-based study of 10 aborted fetuses that underwent complete autopsy and 10 placentas was carried out to determine whether BK polyomavirus (BKV) can be transmitted transplacentally. The interruption of pregnancy was due to a miscarriage (five cases) or a prenatal diagnosis of severe intrauterine malformations (five cases). Samples from the brain, heart, lung, thymus, liver, and kidney were taken from each fetus, and two samples were obtained from all of the placentas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThymosin beta-10 (Tβ10) is a member of beta-thymosins (Tβs), a family of low molecular mass peptides, which play essential roles in many cellular functions, including apoptosis, cell proliferation, cell migration, and endocytosis. The report that the Tβ10 gene is expressed at high levels in embryonic human brain as well in human kidney induced us to study Tβ10 reactivity in the preterm kidney in order to verify, at tissue level, the expression of this peptide during renal embryogenesis. To this end, we analyzed, using immunocytochemistry, the expression of Tβ10 in samples of human kidney obtained, at autopsy, from 8 fetuses, 12 preterm infants, ranging from 25 to 36 weeks of gestation and 3 at term newborns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
October 2010
The kidney of low birthweight preterm infants is characterized by a reduced number of mature nephrons at birth. The aim of the present study was to determine whether, in preterms, active glomerulogenesis occurs in the postnatal period and whether it may compensate the reduced number of nephrons developed during the intrauterine life. Kidney samples were obtained at autopsy from 8 human fetuses, 12 premature infants, and 3 term newborns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonoclonal components (MC) formed by chains/fragments of intact/truncated globulin components produced in different lymphoproliferative diseases are responsible for monoclonal immunoglobulin deposition disease (MIDD) and consequent tissue damage by organized (amyloid fibrils) or non-organized (amorphous) deposits. The kidneys are the most commonly affected organs in MIDD, and renal failure represents an important adverse factor for prognosis. The renal outcome and the role of renal pathology in diagnosing MIDD was evaluated in 289 elderly patients with multiple myeloma (MM, n=115) and monoclonal gammopathy (MGUS, n=174).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Pre-transplant donor biopsy (PTDB) is a common practice in marginal donors, taking for granted that it represents the whole kidney state, but its reliability has not yet been thoroughly investigated. This prompted us to carry out a comparative study on a needle biopsy group (NBG) and a wedge biopsy group (WBG) and their corresponding untransplanted kidneys.
Methods: One hundred and fifty-four biopsies and matched kidneys were scored for four morphologic indexes, i.