Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
SEM
)
47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A clear difference in survival among the patients affected by
gastric cancer
has been observed worldwide between Early Gastric Cancer (EGC) and Advanced
Gastric Cancer
(AGC). Optical fiber endoscopy has allowed a sharp increase in the number of diagnoses of EGC since the sixties. Among 182 our patients operated on, 19 [10.4%] had an EGC. A difference in incidence was found between males and females, while no difference was found in the age distribution. The main symptom was epigastric pain; EGCS common findings were ulceration or a flat tumor. Surgical procedures were carried out with the same criteria used for AGC. No difference was found in the tumor location. Local spread was studied according to the Japanese Research Society for
Gastric Cancer
, while histological type was classified according to Lauren classification. Crude 5-year survival was 80% (8 out of 10), with a mean of 76.8 +/- 13 (
SEM
) months.
...
PMID:Early gastric cancer. 322 64
The concentrations of nitrate, nitrite, N-nitroso compounds and bacteria were measured in 96 samples of fasting gastric juice, pH 0.90-8.50, obtained from 56 individuals just before or at various times (8 days - 1 year) after gastric operation. The mean pH of the post-operative samples [4.66 +/- 0.39 (
SEM
)] was significantly higher than that of the pre-operative ones [3.29 +/- 0.33 (
SEM
)]. A positive correlation with pH was observed for the concentrations of total and nitrate-reducing bacteria (median values 5.0 X 10(5) organisms/ml and 9.2 X 10(4) organisms/ml, respectively, for samples with pH greater than or equal to 1.2 X 10(3) organisms/ml and 0 organisms/ml, respectively, for samples with pH less than or equal to 2.5) and nitrite [mean values 22.5 +/- 3.1 (
SEM
) microM and 3.20 +/- 0.5 (
SEM
) microM for samples with pH greater than or equal to 6.5 and pH less than or equal to 2.5, respectively]. No correlation with pH was seen for the concentrations of nitrate [mean value 0.48 +/- 0.06 (
SEM
) mM] or N-nitroso compounds [mean value 0.30 +/- 0.06 (
SEM
) microM]. The concentrations of bacteria and nitrite, although increased in hypochlorhydric individuals, were lower than those reported for corresponding individuals in other, primarily British, studies. It is suggested that the relatively low concentrations of nitrite observed in our hypochlorhydric population may account for the absence of elevated concentrations of N-nitroso compounds and that the latter phenomenon may be related to the relatively low frequency of
gastric cancer
in Greece.
...
PMID:Studies in gastric carcinogenesis. II. Absence of elevated concentrations of N-nitroso compounds in the gastric juice of Greek hypochlorhydric individuals. 401 83
Spleens of normal structure were obtained in surgery on nine patients with
gastric cancer
. The freeze-cracked surfaces of the organ as well as the vascular casts of methacrylate resin were examined by scanning electron microscopy. Penicillar arteries were confirmed to terminate in the cords of Billroth, representing the open circulation. Labyrinthine channels of arterial capillaries were found in restricted regions in the red pulp neighboring pulp arteries and veins. They characteristically possessed in their lumen spanning trabecullae covered with endothelial cells. In some places, the flat endothelium of a channel continued to the lattice-like endothelium of a thin sinus, representing closed circulation. The occurrence and distribution of the arteriolar labyrinths were confirmed by
SEM
observation of the vascular casts. Their continuation to the thin sinuses was also demonstrated in the casts. The present study evidences that in the human spleen, specialized arteriolar terminals provide a closed circulation route in restricted regions, besides the hitherto known, predominant route of open circulation.
...
PMID:Labyrinthine structure of arterial terminals in the human spleen, with special reference to "closed circulation." A scanning electron microscope study. 406 1
The alterations of the plasma level of elastase 1 (Ela) were investigated in 15 patients undergoing total pancreatectomy (TP), 18 patients undergoing pancreatoduodenectomy (PD), 8 patients undergoing distal pancreatectomy (DP) and 10 patients undergoing gastrectomy for
gastric cancer
(GR). The Ela level decreased rapidly below the normal level after TP. The plasma half-life of Ela was 4.6 +/- 1.2 h (Mean +/-
SEM
). The Ela levels after PD were abnormally elevated until the 7th postoperative day. The Ela levels after DP and GR were elevated gradually until the 7th postoperative day. From 1 to 6 months after PD, DP and GR, the Ela levels were normal. An additional release of Ela from the remaining pancreas following direct surgical interventions to the pancreas resulted in the elevated of the plasma level of Ela in the early postoperative period. The plasma level of Ela was normalized within 2 weeks after pancreatic surgery.
...
PMID:Serial changes in plasma levels of pancreatic elastase 1 after pancreatic surgeries. 765 39
Increased epithelial cell proliferation is associated with an increased risk of adenocarcinoma and is associated with Helicobacter pylori infection. The aim of this study was to assess both gastric epithelial cell proliferation and the influence of H pylori infection on cell kinetics in the progression from normal mucosa to gastric carcinoma. One hundred and forty four subjects were assigned to study groups based on diagnosis and H pylori status: microscopically normal mucosa and H pylori negative (n = 28); chronic active gastritis and H pylori positive (n = 83); atrophic gastritis (n = 9); intestinal metaplasia (n = 19); gastric carcinoma (n = 12). Gastric antral epithelial cell proliferation was assessed using the in vitro bromodeoxyuridine immunohistochemical technique and expressed as the labelling index per cent (LI%). Subjects with chronic atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia or
gastric cancer
have increased gastric epithelial cell proliferation compared with normal mucosa (LI% mean (
SEM
): 5.14 (0.6), 4.68 (0.3), 6.50 (0.5) v 3.08 (0.2), p < 0.001). This increase in gastric epithelial cell proliferation was not influenced by H pylori status. Gastritis associated with H pylori had an increased LI% compared with normal controls or subjects with H pylori negative gastritis (4.98 (0.2) v 3.08 (0.2), 3.83 (0.2), p < 0.01). H pylori infection although associated with an increased epithelial cell proliferation in subjects with chronic gastritis, does not influence the increased epithelial cell proliferation seen in subjects with precancerous lesions or gastric carcinoma. This is further evidence that H pylori may be an initiating step in gastric carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Gastric epithelial cell kinetics in the progression from normal mucosa to gastric carcinoma. 880 Nov 93
Phenotyping of cytokeratin (CK)18-positive cells in bone marrow is gaining increasing importance for future prognostic screening of carcinoma patients. Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPA-R) is one example of a potential aggressive marker for those cells. However, a valid and reliable double staining method is needed. Using monoclonal antibodies against uPA-R and CK18, we modified an immunogold/alkaline phosphatase double staining protocol. UPA-R/CK18-positive tumor cell controls exhibited black uPA-R staining in 15-80% of cases and red CK18 staining in almost 100% of tumor cells. Isotype- and cross-matched controls were completely negative. Bone marrow from healthy donors was always CK18-negative. Reproducibility of CK18-positive cell detection was estimated in a series of specimens from 61
gastric cancer
patients comparatively stained with the single alkaline phosphatase-anti-alkaline phosphatase (APAAP) and our double staining method (10(6) bone marrow cells/patient). In four cases, double staining could not reproduce CK18-positive cells. In 34 cases it revealed fewer or equal numbers, and in 23 cases more CK18-positive cells than the APAAP method. Overall quantitative analysis of detected cell numbers (838 in APAAP, range 1-280 in 10(6); double staining 808, range 0-253) demonstrated relative reproducibility of APAAP results by double staining of 97%. Correlation of results between both methods was significant (p < 0.001, linear regression). Sensitivity of double staining tested in logarithmic tumor cell dilutions was one CK18-positive cell in 300,000. Specific uPA-R staining was seen on CK18-positive cells in bone marrow from 29 of 61 patients, and also on single surrounding bone marrow cells. To test the specificity of this staining, bone marrow cytospins from 10 patients without tumor disease were stained for uPA-R with the APAAP method. uPA-R expression was confirmed in all 10 cases, with a mean of 6.5% uPA-R-positive cells in 1000 bone marrow cells (
SEM
1.2%). These results suggest that our double staining protocol is a sensitive, reproducible, and specific method for routine uPA-R phenotyping of disseminated CK18-positive cells in bone marrow of carcinoma patients.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical phenotyping of disseminated tumor cells in bone marrow by uPA receptor and CK18: investigation of sensitivity and specificity of an immunogold/alkaline phosphatase double staining protocol. 901 10
The presence of the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) gene and CEA expression in the liver was tested to identify their possible roles in the liver metastasis of colorectal carcinoma. The CEA gene in the liver was identified by amplifying the CEA-specific N-terminal domain exon with digoxigenin-dUTP labeling in 16 colorectal carcinomas with liver metastases. Next, CEA expression was tested by immunostaining using the anti-CEA monoclonal antibody (T84.66, ATCC). Liver tissues from 13
stomach cancer
patients and 12 colorectal cancer patients without liver metastasis were also tested as control groups. Three grades (<25%, 25-50%, and 50%< or =) were given according to the proportion of positive cells. The CEA gene was amplified in the metastatic tumor cells of the liver (2.6 +/- 0.2, mean grade +/-
SEM
) and their surrounding hepatocytes (1.5 +/- 0.2) in all cases. CEA expression was found in all metastatic tumor cells and 14 cases of the surrounding hepatocytes. Among the control groups, the CEA gene of the hepatocytes was found in 9 cases each of the colorectal and the stomach cancers that did not exhibit CEA expression. The level of serum CEA was related with the numbers and volume of liver metastases, but not with CEA expression in tumor cells and surrounding hepatocytes. The CEA gene in the metastatic tumor cells, not in the hepatocytes, was closely associated with CEA expression in the surrounding hepatocytes (p<0.01). Although the precise mechanism of CEA gene regulation in hepatocytes remains to be proven, the CEA gene in the metastatic tumor of the liver seems to affect CEA expression in the surrounding hepatocytes facilitating liver metastasis in colorectal carcinoma.
...
PMID:Carcinoembryonic antigen gene and carcinoembryonic antigen expression in the liver metastasis of colorectal carcinoma. 1034 Apr 66
The aim of this work was to evaluate the cytosolic contents of hyaluronic acid (HA) and cathepsin D (CatD) in gastric carcinomas and their possible relationships with the clinicopathological parameters of the tumors. Our study demonstrated a wide variability in the cytosolic levels of HA (mean +/-
SEM
: 3748 +/- 411 ng/mg protein) and cathepsin D (52 +/- 4 pmol/mg protein) in the tumors of 78
gastric cancer
patients. In addition, the tumoral contents of HA and CatD were significantly higher (p<0.005) in diffuse type (HA: 6027 +/- 1099 ng/mg protein; CatD: 75 +/- 13 pmol/mg protein) than in intestinal type (HA: 2735 +/- 242 ng/mg protein; CatD: 42 +/- 3 pmol/mg protein) carcinomas. These data suggest that both markers may contribute to the biological characterization of gastric carcinomas.
...
PMID:Relationship of tumoral hyaluronic acid and cathepsin D contents with histological type of gastric carcinoma. 1101 96
Adhesion of tumor cells to mesothelial cells or extracellular matrix components is a pivotal step in developing peritoneal dissemination after
gastric cancer
. As phospholipids were found to reduce adhesion formation, especially at sites of peritoneal lesions, we assessed the inhibition of attachment of NUGC-4
gastric cancer
cells by local treatment with phospholipids to the peritoneum in nude mice.
Gastric cancer
cells (1xl0(6)) suspended in either normal saline (controls) or phospholipid suspension 75 mg/kg body weight (PL75) or 150 mg/kg (PL150) were injected intraperitoneally into 90 female BALB/c nu/nu mice. The treatment groups were subdivided into animals with defined peritoneal lesions and animals without lesions. After 30 days the extent of peritoneal carcinosis and the Peritoneal Cancer Index were evaluated. Statistical analysis was performed with two factorial ANOVAs. The level of significance was adjusted according to Bonferrorni (alpha = 0.00278). During a 90-day observation period the survival rate was determined using the log rank test. After 30 days the intraperitoneal tumor volume was reduced by PL150 up to 0.6 ml (
SEM
0.16) and 0.48 ml (
SEM
0.09) in mice with peritoneal lesions compared to 0.9 ml (
SEM
0.2) and 0.9 ml (
SEM
0.1) in the control group (P = 0.04). The mean area of tumor adhesion amounted to 145 mm(2) (
SEM
17) (P = 0.08) and 164 mm(2) (
SEM
32.8) (P = 0.049) with peritoneal lesions after treatment with PL150 [controls: 216 mm(2) (
SEM
28.5) and 245 mm(2) (
SEM
29.3)]. The peritoneal cancer index was 16.4 (
SEM
1.7) in the control group and 9 (
SEM
1.68) with PL150 (P = 0.0002). In the subgroup with peritoneal lesions, the respective values were as follows: controls: 20.8 (
SEM
0.85); PL 150:14.3 (
SEM
1.07) (P = 0.0001). We found a prolonged survival rate after treatment with PL150. However, this effect was not significantly different to that seen in the control group. Treatment with PL75 had no significant influence. Phospholipids may be an efficacious and economic tool for reducing peritoneal tumor cell adhesion and consequently the development of peritoneal carcinosis after resection of
gastric cancer
.
...
PMID:Inhibition of gastric cancer cell adhesion in nude mice by inraperitoneal phospholipids. 1589 97
It has been suggested that iodine plays an important role in
gastric cancer
.
Gastric cancer
ranks first among the cancers in the north-eastern Anatolia region, Turkey, where iodine deficiency is common. In this study, iodine levels were determined in
gastric cancer
and surrounding normal tissues in 19 patients with
gastric cancer
. Tissue iodine levels were determined by the Foss method based on the Sandell-Kolt-hoff reaction. Tissue iodine levels were lower in
gastric cancer
tissue (17.8+/-3.4 ng I/mg protein, mean+/-
SEM
) compared with surrounding normal tissue (41.7+/-8.0 ng I/mg protein) (p<0.001). There was positive correlation between the iodine levels in
gastric cancer
tissue and surrounding normal tissue (r = 0.845, p<0.001). There was no significant difference in iodine levels in cancer and surrounding normal tissue between male and female subjects. The iodine deficiency in our region may be one of the factors for increased
gastric cancer
prevalence. Our results support the hypothesis that iodine plays an important role in
gastric cancer
development.
...
PMID:Comparison of iodine contents in gastric cancer and surrounding normal tissues. 1600 52
1
2
Next >>