3 results match your criteria: "Charles University in Prague and University Hospital Motol Prague[Affiliation]"
Curr Opin Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
April 2019
Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague and University Hospital Motol Prague, Czech Republic.
Purpose Of Review: The role of HPV in oropharyngeal cancer is well recognized. HPV DNA is also found in a fraction of head and neck tumors outside of oropharynx but its clinical importance is unknown. The purpose of this review is to sum up the present knowledge about the prevalence and possible impact of HPV presence in head and neck tumors in nonoropharyngeal sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Transl Res
September 2015
Department of Laboratory Genetics, Institute of Laboratory Diagnostics, University Hospital Kralovske Vinohrady Srobarova 50, Prague, Czech Republic ; 3rd Department of Surgery, First Faculty of Medicine Charles University in Prague and University Hospital Motol Prague, Czech Republic ; Department of Histology and Embryology, Wroclaw Medical University Chalubinskiego 6a, 50-368 Wroclaw, Poland.
The focus of the study was to implement a new workflow for circulating tumor cells (CTCs) characterization that would allow the analysis of CTCs on a cytomorphological and molecular level in patients with diagnosed gynecological cancer. Our findings may be useful in future cancer patient management. The study introduces a size-based enrichment (MetaCell(®)) method for the separation of viable CTCs, followed by CTCs culturing in vitro and gene expression characterization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Aging Neurosci
October 2012
Department of Neurology, Memory Disorders Clinic, 2nd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague and University Hospital Motol Prague 5, Czech Republic.
Spatial navigation is a skill of determining and maintaining a trajectory from one place to another. Mild progressive decline of spatial navigation develops gradually during the course of physiological ageing. Nevertheless, severe spatial navigation deficit can be the first sign of incipient Alzheimer's disease (AD), occurring in the stage of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), preceding the development of a full blown dementia.
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