Osseous and cartilaginous soft tissue tumours are a heterogenous group of neoplasms characterised by the presence of an osseous or cartilaginous component. Mineralisation of the osseous or cartilaginous component is a common finding amongst these lesions, presenting as calcification/ossification on radiological imaging. This pictorial review examines the key imaging findings and characteristics of osseous and cartilaginous soft tissue tumours with a focus on the distinguishing features which can help the radiologist to differentiate benign and malignant lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Question: Can oocyte functionality be assessed by observing changes in their intracytoplasmic lipid droplets (LDs) profiles?
Summary Answer: Lipid profile changes can reliably be detected in human oocytes; lipid changes are linked with maternal age and impaired developmental competence in a mouse model.
What Is Known Already: In all cellular components, lipid damage is the earliest manifestation of oxidative stress (OS), which leads to a cascade of negative consequences for organelles and DNA. Lipid damage is marked by the accumulation of LDs.
Myxoid soft-tissue tumours are mesenchymal neoplasms, which are characterised by the production of abundant extracellular myxoid matrix. Imaging plays an important role in the diagnosis of these tumours as well as treatment planning. The imaging features as well as the clinical course for these lesions are highly variable, depending on both the anatomical location of the tumour and the histopathological subtype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To evaluate the validity of spot urine assay methods in estimating the 24-h urinary sodium, potassium and sodium-to-potassium ratio during three different sodium diets.
Materials And Methods: Twelve healthy volunteers were asked to adhere to 3 dietary sodium targets (3.3-5.
Electronic health records (EHRs) contain valuable data for reuse in science, quality evaluations, and clinical decision support. Because routinely obtained laboratory data are abundantly present, often numeric, generated by certified laboratories, and stored in a structured way, one may assume that they are immediately fit for (re)use in research. However, behind each test result lies an extensive context of choices and considerations, made by both humans and machines, that introduces hidden patterns in the data.
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