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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Previous assays for nonenzymatic advanced glycosylation end products (AGEs) formed in tissues and/or circulating in blood are unsatisfactory. Based on our earlier identification of AGE-specific receptors on the macrophagelike tumor cell line RAW 264.7, a new assay system for AGEs has been devised. RAW 264.7 cells were used in competitive radioreceptor assays (RRA) after a 3-day culture in 96-well plates with 1 mu CI/ml [3H]glycine. Bovine serum albumin (BSA), modified extensively by incubation with glucose-6-phosphate in vitro to form AGE-BSA, was labeled with 125I and was used as a model ligand at a concn of 10 micrograms/ml. One unit of AGE was defined as the amount of test protein required to inhibit 50% of the specific binding of [125I]-labeled AGE-BSA to the AGE-receptors of intact RAW 264.7 cells. Nonlabeled AGE-BSA was used as a specific competitor to construct standard curves. The reproducibility of the assay was assessed at AGE levels equivalent to mean, maximum, and minimum levels of sensitivity for assays run on a single day and over an extended period, and the RRA had a reproducibility (coefficient of variation) between 5.9 and 14.7%. Protease hydrolysis of in vitro glycosylated proteins before assay increases the competitive ability of these proteins in proportion to their glycosylation. Little or no AGE cross-reactivity was detected in native BSA, Amadori-BSA, maleylated BSA, formaldehyde-treated BSA, palmitic acid-BSA, and acetylated low-density lipoproteins (acetyl-LDL). Polyanions such as heparin or fucoidan strongly interfere with this receptor binding assay.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes 1991 Dec
PMID:Radioreceptor assay for advanced glycosylation end products. 166 95

The authors report a very rare case of pituitary adenoma producing both GH and ACTH. A 29-year-old female was admitted with obesity, amenorrhea, acromegaly, hirsutism, excessive pigmentation, acne, and diabetes mellitus. Computed tomography revealed an intrasellar tumor 16 mm in height, with a destroyed sellar floor. The blood concentrations of GH, ACTH and cortisol were increased (GH: 92 ng/ml, ACTH: 94 pg/ml, cortisol: 18.3 micrograms/dl). No diurnal variation in the amount of cortisol was observed. The urinary 17-OHCS was suppressed by 8 mg but not by 2 mg of dexamethasone. A subtotal adenomectomy was then performed through the transsphenoidal approach, which led to a sufficient reduction of both blood GH and ACTH (cortisol). Histologically the tumor was an acidophilic pituitary adenoma. Immunoperoxidase staining showed diffuse GH and sporadic ACTH producing cells, but failed to show any cells producing both hormones. The electron micrograms of neoplastic cells showed the ultrastructural characteristics of respective GH and ACTH cells. Another increase in both GH and cortisol, which occurred 19 months after the operation, has been controlled by bromocriptine administration. This case may be the first reported case of a pituitary adenoma producing both GH and ACTH, not accompanied by prolactin (PRL) hypersecretion, which has been fully confirmed endocrinologically and histopathologically.
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PMID:A case of pituitary adenoma producing both growth hormone (GH) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). 166 12

Blood antioxidant system parameters were examined in elderly subjects. The authors have developed methods for measurements of catalase, superoxide dismutase, and lipid peroxidation products. They introduce a new factor 'F' that is supposed to characterize the blood antioxidant system; this factor is based on the values of catalase and superoxide dismutase activities and the intensity of lipid peroxidation. The authors come to a conclusion that the blood antioxidant and oxidant systems may be more accurately described with the use of this new factor F. In case of an abdominal tumor whole blood catalase level is elevated and superoxide dismutase activity significantly reduced. Factor F values were found extremely low before death, therefore this factor may be considered an important criterion of a critical state. The blood antioxidant parameters of patients with diabetes mellitus and essential hypertension did not much differ from those of age-matched healthy subjects.
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PMID:[Determination of the antioxidant properties of the blood and their diagnostic significance in the elderly]. 172 48

The placenta is a specialized organ of exchange that provides nutrients to and excretes waste products from the fetus. The exchange of nutrients between placenta and fetus involves three major mechanisms: 1) direct transfer of nutrients from the maternal to the fetal plasma, 2) placental consumption of nutrients, and 3) placental conversion of nutrients to alternate substrate forms. Although direct transfer has been considered the primary means by which placental-fetal exchange controls the supply of nutrients to the fetus and thereby fetal metabolism and growth, the considerable metabolic activity of the placenta provides a large and fundamentally important contribution to both the quality and quantity of nutrient substrates supplied to the fetus; e.g., placental O2 and glucose consumption rates approach or even exceed those of brain and tumor tissue. Other placental metabolic activities include glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, glycogenesis, oxidation, protein synthesis, amino acid interconversion, triglyceride synthesis, and chain lengthening or shortening of individual fatty acids. Thus, consideration of the metabolism of the placenta is essential for a more complete understanding of how the placenta regulates nutrient transfer to the fetus, fetal energy balance, and fetal growth.
Diabetes 1991 Dec
PMID:The placenta. Not just a conduit for maternal fuels. 174 65

We studied the effects of intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) with a new nitrosourea (hydroxyethyl-chloroethyl nitrosourea: HeCNU) on the visual system of 68 patients with malignant gliomas. The intra-arterial chemotherapy was given as a complementary treatment of glioma after surgery (19 patients), after tumor recurrence (28 patients) and as the preliminary treatment before radiotherapy (21 patients). Eleven patients (16%) suffered a visual complication after two or more courses of chemotherapy. The main visual symptoms included mild to major decrease of visual acuity and in some cases ocular pain, palpebral edema and conjunctival injection. The delay in onset of ocular symptoms from the last course of IAC varied from 1 week to 9 months. From ophthalmoscopic findings, visual field testing and fluorescein angiography, the visual symptoms presented by our patients could be related to ischemic optic neuropathy or retinal vasculopathy. None of the patients had hypertension, diabetes, cardiopathy or hematological disease. Statistical analysis failed to demonstrate a relationship between the occurrence of visual toxicity and patient age, number of courses of HeCNU, the vascular axis treated, total systemic dose or dose by carotid artery, suggesting a possible specific sensitivity of some patients to chemotherapy. The pathophysiology and the therapeutic implications of this visual toxicity are discussed.
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PMID:Visual toxicity following intra-arterial chemotherapy with hydroxyethyl-CNU in patients with malignant gliomas. A prospective study with statistical analysis. 174 75

This review highlights the contributions of recent pericyte research towards our understanding of normal and pathological functioning of microvessels. Pericytes are implicated in a variety of microvascular alterations, including wound healing, diabetes, inflammation, hypertension and neoplasia. They are capable of changing into other mesodermally derived cell types, including smooth muscle cells, osteoblasts and chondrocytes. The contractile properties of pericytes are being systematically examined in vitro; in addition to their tendency to contract spontaneously, pericytes can contract further in response to mediators of inflammation. In vivo studies indicate pericytes are concentrated near endothelial cell junctions along venules where they likely participate in inflammatory events. As agents are identified which modify pericyte responses to disease states, better therapeutic approaches will become possible.
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PMID:Recent advances in pericyte biology--implications for health and disease. 176 82

In the outer membrane of animal cells there exist different isoforms of glucose-transporters (GluT), that contain pores for the facilitative intake of glucose. The content of the various forms of GluT in the different cells is influenced by the stage of development and by the plasma-concentration of glucose. In the regulation of the glucose-concentration in the plasma the content of the skeletal musculature and of the adipose tissue in GluT type 4 plays an important role: It is insulin-dependent. In diabetes mellitus the content of the outer membranes of the cells of the mentioned tissues in GluT 4 is - in dependence of the degree of the disturbance - more or less reduced. The binding of insulin to the receptor in the musculature and in adipose tissue stimulates the transport of GluT 4 from the interior of the cells to the outer membrane. Fasting causes an increase in the content of GluT 4 in the musculature and a decrease in the adipose tissue. Tumor-cells have an increased uptake of glucose with the help of GluT.
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PMID:[Recent knowledge of the function of glucose transport molecules in cell membranes, of the regulation of their composition and of modification of their activity and changes in concentration in diseases (diabetes mellitus, Tumors)]. 179

Mucormycosis is a rare opportunistic fungal infection of immunosuppressed patients. We describe here 5 cases of mucormycosis: three with facial and eye involvement, one with lung involvement and one affecting skin and joints. All five patients had underlying diseases: diabetes, leukemia, lymphoma, neoplasia and AIDS. Four patients were treated with amphotericin B and also with surgical debridement. Infection could be controlled only in two patients. Both survived but with major sequelae. In two additional patients, death was directly related to the infection and the remaining patient was lost to follow-up.
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PMID:[Infection by Mucorales fungi]. 180 50

When a lizard loses its tail, a new caudal appendage soon grows to replace the one that is missing. But when a human loses a kidney, severs a peripheral nerve or worse, the spinal cord, that organ is lost forever. Such at least is conventional thinking. But imagine that the victim of an industrial accident with a paralyzed hand could achieve new levels of function by inducing axonal regrowth through a synthetic nerve guidance channel; or that a Parkinsonian patient's symptoms could be relieved by implanting in his brain neural tissue encased in a selectively permeable polymer envelope; or that the inexorable progression of the vascular complications of juvenile diabetes could be stopped, even reversed, by a membrane-protected xenograft of insulin-producing tissue. This is the dream of bionic organ science. It is predicated on two lines of technological achievement: the availability of ultra-thin, biocompatible, selectively permeable polymer membranes which can protect a transplant against immune rejection while allowing solute exchange between the graft and its environment; and the synthesis of novel materials, some biostable, some bioresorbable, which can serve as scaffolding or anchor for tissue regrowth in the geometrically and chemically controlled environment of an implant. The fabrication, growth and survival of composites of living tissues with synthetic polymers, often enhanced by the incorporation of specific cell growth factors or inhibitors, has been demonstrated at the tissue culture level, and extended in vivo to experimental models of human endocrine deficiency or neurological defects. The key to progress with bioartificial organs is the confluence of knowledge ranging from materials science to cell and molecular biology to experimental surgery. Obstacles to clinical implementation of this new therapeutic concept include: large scale procurement of specific tissue structures or isolated postmitotic cells from animal sources; demonstration of safety and efficacy of spontaneously occurring, bioactive tumor cell lines; verification of long-term stability and bio-acceptance of polymer implants; and industrialization of the fabrication process to meet quality control, shelf-life and commercial distribution requirements.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Bionic organs. 181 5

A 28-year-old woman with diabetes mellitus and alcoholic hepatitis presented a rare case of Buschke Lowenstein tumor, or giant condyloma of vulva. HPV DNA of this tumor was detected by in situ hybridization using tritium labeled HPV 6 b, 16 and 18 DNA. This tumor appeared to harbour HPV 6 b DNA, but other HPV DNAs were negative. The distribution of HPV 6 b DNA was detected in the nucleus of the squamous epithelium showing koilocytosis. Total vulvectomy and resection of the clitoris were done. The postoperative course was uneventful and there has been no recurrence of tumor so far.
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PMID:[A case report of Buschke-Lowenstein tumor (giant condyloma)]. 184 13


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