We describe a young female patient suffering from a PEComa (perivascular epithelioid cell tumor) of the cecum, incidentally found at an examination made by her family physician. The perivascular epithelioid cell tumor is a very rare tumor, until today reported in a few cases in falciform ligament, uterus, jejunum, terminal ileum, rectum, liver, kidney, lung, pancreas, prostate, and soft tissue of the thigh. This tumor is part of a new group of tumors, comprised of angiomyolipoma, lymphangiomyolipoma, and clear-cell myomelanocytic "sugar" tumor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: We investigated the reduction in co-morbidities following laparoscopic adjustable silicone gastric banding (LAGB).
Methods: Between December 1996 and October 2002, 295 patients with mean BMI 45 kg/m(2) were operated (79% women, average age 41 years). Mean follow-up was 44 months.
Background: Re-operations after laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding operation (LAGB) are band-associated or due to complications of the access-port. Symptoms, diagnostics, operations, and follow-up of patients with re-operations were analyzed.
Methods: Between December 1996 and January 2002, 250 morbidly obese patients were treated with LAGB and prospectively evaluated using a standardized protocol.
Germline mutations within the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene, a key member of the Wnt signalling pathway, have been shown to cause adenoma development in familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), a dominantly inherited predisposition to colorectal cancer. Although it has been suggested for several years that alterations within the Wnt pathway are the underlying events for the development of colorectal adenomas in FAP patients, no detailed analysis of the gene expressions of Wnt pathway members has been available in fresh colorectal tissue of FAP patients, so far. Thus, we investigated potential differences in the expressions of APC and its Wnt partners conductin, beta-catenin, cyclin D1, and c-myc in normal colorectal mucosa and matched adenoma tissue of 14 FAP patients using real-time quantitative PCR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF