Radiation therapy has been used extensively in the management of patients with cancer of the esophagus. It has demonstrated an ability to cure a small minority of patients. Cure is likely to be limited to patients who have lesions less than 5 cm in length and have minimal, if any, involvement of lymph nodes. Esophagectomy is likely to cure a similar, small percentage of patients with the same presentation of minimal disease but has a substantial acute postoperative mortality rate and greater morbidity than irradiation. Combining surgery and either preoperative or postoperative irradiation may cure a small percentage of patients beyond the number cured with either modality alone. Radiation has demonstrated benefit as an adjuvant to surgery following the resection of minimal disease. However, radiation alone has never been compared directly with surgery for the highly select, minimal lesions managed by surgery. Radiation provides good palliation of dysphagia in the majority of patients, and roughly one third may have adequate swallowing for the duration of their illness when "radical" doses have been employed. Surgical bypass procedures have greater acute morbidity but appear to provide more reliable, prolonged palliation of dysphagia. They constitute the best approach for patients with persistent or recurrent dysphagia following esophageal irradiation. Several approaches to improving the efficacy of irradiation are currently under investigation. Fewer large fractions appear to be equivalent to conventionally fractionated radiotherapy in terms of local control and survival but produce more prompt palliation and shorten courses of palliative therapy. Multiple-daily-fractionation schedules and hyperfractionation have theoretical appeal and clear basis for investigation from the early suggestions of improved response rates in advanced squamous-cell cancer of the head and neck. Hypoxic-cell radiosensitizers, neutron-beam, and helium-ion therapy results have not been overly encouraging in esophageal cancer, thus far. However, the new generation of particle beams and the new radiation-sensitizer drugs require further evaluation. Better means of dealing with the high incidence of disseminated disease are clearly needed. It is clear that combined-modality approaches using both local and systemic therapy will ultimately be desirable in esophageal-cancer treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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J Undergrad Neurosci Educ
December 2024
Department of Biology, Amherst College, Amherst, MA 01002.
Course-based undergraduate research experiences (CUREs) provide a variety of benefits to student learning outcomes. Here we describe an upper-level semester-long CURE that was implemented in Spring 2024 at Amherst College, a small liberal arts college, as part of the NEUR 313: Social Neuroendocrinology course. In the CURE students conducted behavioral and immunohistochemical assays in the fighting fish .
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January 2025
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, 78712, USA. Electronic address:
Direct pacing of the mid myocardium where re-entry originates can be used to prevent ventricular arrhythmias and circumvent the need for painful defibrillation or cardiac ablation. However, there are no pacing electrodes small enough to navigate the coronary veins that cross these culprit scar regions. To address this need, we have developed an injectable ionically conductive hydrogel electrode that can fill the epicardial coronary veins and transform them into flexible electrodes.
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January 2025
Department CIBIO, University of Trento, Via delle Regole 101, 38123 Trento, Italy. Electronic address:
Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is a life-shortening autosomal recessive disease caused by mutations in the CFTR gene, resulting in functional impairment of the encoded ion channel. F508del mutation, a trinucleotide deletion, is the most frequent cause of CF affecting approximately 80% of persons with cystic fibrosis (pwCFs). Even though current pharmacological treatments alleviate the F508del-CF disease symptoms there is no definitive cure.
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Innovative Genomics Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.
The widespread application of genome editing to treat and cure disease requires the delivery of genome editors into the nucleus of target cells. Enveloped delivery vehicles (EDVs) are engineered virally derived particles capable of packaging and delivering CRISPR-Cas9 ribonucleoproteins (RNPs). However, the presence of lentiviral genome encapsulation and replication proteins in EDVs has obscured the underlying delivery mechanism and precluded particle optimization.
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Lyv Healthcare, 6 rue Edouard Nignon, Nantes, FR.
Background: After suffering for an average of 7 years before diagnosis, endometriosis patients are usually left with more questions than answers about managing their symptoms in the absence of a cure. To help women with endometriosis after their diagnosis, we developed an online support program combining user research, evidence-based medicine, and clinical expertise. Structured around CBT and the quality-of-life metrics from the EHP score, the program is designed to guide participants over a 3-month and is available in France.
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