3 results match your criteria: "The Athens National University Medical School[Affiliation]"
Nephrol Dial Transplant
January 2007
Department of Pathology, The Athens National University Medical School, 75 Mikras Asias str., Goudi, GR-115 27 Athens, Greece.
Background: Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) have been implicated to play important roles in a number of pathological processes such as inflammation. In human glomeruli, the mesangial matrix turnover is controlled by a dynamic equilibrium between synthesis and degradation to which metalloproteinases are known to contribute. Metalloproteinase-11 (MMP-11) was originally discovered as a gene whose expression was associated with tissue remodelling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Derm Venereol
February 2001
Department of Pathology, The Athens National University Medical School, Greece.
A middle-aged man with an 8-year history of a fungating tumour mass on his thigh was histologically diagnosed as having an invasive "warty" carcinoma at the location of a pre-existing human papillomavirus (HPV) lesion. The tumour surface had a verruciform appearance with papillae containing fibrovascular cores. Many of the malignant cells displayed changes consistent with koilocytotic atypia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMelanoma Res
August 2000
Department of Pathology, The Athens National University Medical School, Greece.
Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP), the mammalian counterpart of bombesin, was first identified in the nervous system of the gastrointestinal tract. Little is known about its distribution in the human skin or about its function in certain diseases such as malignant melanoma. Recently functional GRP receptors have been found on human melanoma cell lines.
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