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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
SEM
)
47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A new technique for observing the same
lung cancer
cells by light microscope and
SEM
was developed. By this technique it was clarified that the surface ultrastructures of epidermoid carcinoma, adenocarcinoma and oat-cell carcinoma cells are different from each other. Those of adenocarcinoma and mesothelial cells were quite different. This technique might be of use, adding new information into the ordinary cytologic diagnosis of cancer cells.
...
PMID:Scanning electron microscopy in the study of lung cancer. New technique of comparative studies on the same lung cancer cells by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. 18 47
The in vitro formation of benzo[a]pyrene-DNA adducts was determined in peripheral blood monocytes of 22
lung cancer
patients with at least one first-degree relative with
lung cancer
and compared to results obtained in 30 healthy controls. In patients, the mean (
SEM
) adduct formation was 2.8 (0.3) fmol/micrograms DNA as compared to 2.1 (0.1) fmol/micrograms in controls (p less than 0.05), and it was independent of age and smoking habits. These findings support the hypothesis that carcinogen-DNA adduct formation may be one factor of a constitutionally enhanced
lung cancer
risk.
...
PMID:Formation of benzo[a]pyrene-DNA adducts in blood monocytes from lung cancer patients with a familial history of lung cancer. 130 33
By analysis of pleural effusions from 200 patients, 25 cases of amylase-rich effusions were identified, for an overall incidence of 13 percent. Four of the 25 patients (16 percent) had evidence of pancreatitis. These patients had higher mean ratios of pleural fluid to serum amylase levels (18 +/- 6.3 [
SEM
] vs 4.8 +/- 1.3) compared to patients with nonpancreatic diseases (p = 0.003); all four exhibited a predominant pancreatic isoenzyme profile. Of the 21 patients with nonpancreatic amylase-rich effusions,
lung cancer
was the most commonly associated condition (8 patients). In 14 of the 21 patients in whom an isoenzyme profile was obtained, salivary-type amylase was predominant. Amylase-rich pleural effusions occur frequently, and pleural fluid isoamylase determination is specific for pancreatitis-associated effusions. The finding of a pleural effusion rich in salivary isoamylase should prompt an evaluation for carcinoma (particularly of lung primary), but may also be seen in other pleural inflammatory conditions.
...
PMID:A prospective study of amylase-rich pleural effusions with special reference to amylase isoenzyme analysis. 751 19
To noninvasively study positional effects on superior vena caval configuration in humans, endoscopic ultrasonography was performed in 34 subjects including 20 with
lung cancer
, 5 with esophageal cancer and 9 with other diseases. None of the these subjects had cardiovascular involvement or respiratory dysfunction. A fiberoptic esophagoscope equipped with a 7.5 MHz linear array ultrasonic transducer at its tip (EPE-703, Toshiba-Machida) was used for the study. The actual movement of the superior vena cava (SVC) was clearly observed at the hilar level in all cases. During the cardiac cycle the anteroposterior diameter of the SVC was observed to reach a maximum at the atrial systole and reached a minimum at the late ventricular systole. With respiration, the SVC increased in diameter during inspiration and decreased during expiration. Moreover M and B mode figures of the SVC wall were recorded in left (LLD) and right decubitus (RLD) and supine position (SUP) in 34 subjects. On quiet ventilation of FRC level the diameter of the SVC was unchanged. Both the maximal and minimal diameters of the SVC, which were corrected for body surface area (BSA), were 11.3 +/- 0.3 (mean +/-
SEM
) mm/m2 and 9.8 +/- 0.3 mm/m2 in right lateral decubitus position, 9.4 +/- 0.3 and 7.9 +/- 0.3 in the supine position, 8.5 +/- 0.3 and 7.1 +/- 0.3 in the left lateral decubitus position, respectively. The size of the SVC was the greatest in the right lateral decubitus position and was the smallest in left lateral decubitus position (p less than 0.01, multiple comparison). It was suggested that the geometry of the SVC is influenced by thoracic pressure and gravity and that it behaves very similarly to pulmonary vascular vessels as a collapsible tube.
...
PMID:[Dynamic changes in superior vena caval configuration based on posture]. 175 32
Alveolar macrophages (AM) from rats with
lung cancer
induced by 3,4-benzo(a)pyrene were collected and examined under
SEM
. According to changes of the surface ultrastructure, AMs were classified into activated and unactivated groups. Different groups of cells were incubated with Hela cells as the target, and cytostatic activity of AM was studied in vitro, including observation of the morphological changes as well as determination of the cytostatic index (CI). Results showed that AMs from non-tumor-bearing and control groups had spontaneous cytotoxicity, which might be related to the existence of a certain proportion of activated macrophages in the host, while the activity of AM from the tumor-bearing group was obviously inhibited.
...
PMID:[Activity of alveolar macrophages of experimental lung cancer and inhibition of cell proliferation]. 208 52
The effects of cryopreservation on bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced interleukin-1 (IL-1) production by unfractionated mononuclear cells (MNCs), adherent cells (ACs), and nonadherent cells (NACs) were studied. Culture supernatants from cryopreserved cells contained significantly larger concentrations of IL-1 [MNCs, 211 +/- 50; ACs, 640 +/- 41; NACs, 116 +/- 19 U/ml (mean +/-
SEM
)] as compared with supernatants from fresh cells (69 +/- 22, 427 +/- 69, and 72 +/- 33 U/ml, respectively). In addition, supernatants obtained from cocultures of autologous fresh and frozen cells contained much less than the expected quantities of IL-1 (78 +/- 8%), indicating that suppressor cells in the fresh population are responsible for the decreased IL-1 content. The studies suggest that functional inactivation of cryosensitive suppressor monocytes is associated with an increase in IL-1 production by the other subset. The results provide further evidence that lack of active suppressor monocytes and increased IL-1 production may be responsible for the previously reported enhanced plaque-forming cell responses of cryopreserved cells from normal controls and from patients with
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Cryopreservation enhances interleukin-1 production in human mononuclear cells. 213 99
To determine the clinical utility of airway carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) concentrations to distinguish malignant from inflammatory airway disease in patients undergoing bronchoscopy, we determined CEA concentrations by enzyme immunoassay in bronchial washings recovered in 48 subjects, including 20 patients with central
lung cancer
, 18 patients with chronic bronchitis, and ten nonsmoking patients with a diagnosis of pneumonia or peripheral granuloma. Concentrations of CEA in bronchial washings were standardized by using the total protein concentration in recovered fluid (CEA/TP). Concentrations of CEA were significantly increased in bronchial washings recovered from both patients with chronic bronchitis and
lung cancer
compared with patients with pneumonia or granuloma (252 +/- 47 ng/mg and 199 +/- 64 ng/ml vs 62 +/- 11 ng/mg,
SEM
, p less than 0.005). Airway CEA concentrations in patients with chronic bronchitis were somewhat increased compared with concentrations recovered from a cancer-involved airway (252 +/- 47 ng/ml vs 199 +/- 64 ng/mg,
SEM
, p less than 0.05). Measurement of airway CEA concentrations is not useful in distinguishing malignant from inflammatory airway disease as airway concentrations of CEA may be markedly increased in patients with both conditions.
...
PMID:Airway carcinoembryonic antigen concentrations in patients with central lung cancer or chronic bronchitis. 219 39
Sialyl stage-specific mouse embryonic antigen (SSEA-1) levels were measured in pleural effusions obtained from patients with
lung cancer
and benign pulmonary disease, using a solid-phase immunoradiometric sandwich assay. The mean (+/-
SEM
) levels (unit/ml) of pleural fluid sialyl SSEA-1 were 3620 +/- 1419 in adenocarcinoma (n = 25), 123 +/- 30 in nonadenocarcinoma (n = 13) and 95 +/- 19 in benign pulmonary disease (n = 13), respectively. The positive rate was 64% in adenocarcinoma, 7.7% in nonadenocarcinoma, and 0% in benign pulmonary disease, respectively, when a cutoff level was defined as the mean + 3 SD value (300 unit/ml) based on pleural fluid sialyl SSEA-1 levels in benign pulmonary disease. There was a significant positive correlation between pleural fluid levels of sialyl SSEA-1 and those of carcinoembryonic antigen in adenocarcinoma patients (r = 0.8246, P less than 0.01). Pleural fluid sialyl SSEA-1 levels correlated with cytologic findings in adenocarcinoma patients. These observations suggest that sialyl SSEA-1 in pleural effusion is a useful marker to discriminate malignant from nonmalignant and adenocarcinoma from nonadenocarcinoma of the lung.
...
PMID:Elevation of sialyl stage-specific mouse embryonic antigen levels in pleural effusion in patients with adenocarcinoma of the lung. 256 56
To determine whether concentrations of the primary airway immunoglobulins (SIgA, IgG) are altered in the uninvolved lung of patients with
lung cancer
, we determined concentrations of SIgA and IgG in bronchial washings recovered from a proximal airway of the uninvolved lung in 24 patients with
lung cancer
and in ten patients with benign lung disease. When standardized for the amount of total protein recovered (SIgA/TP, IgG/TP), bronchial washings recovered from the uninvolved lung of
lung cancer
patients demonstrated a significantly decreased SIgA/TP ratio compared to control subjects (.14 +/- .02 vs .31 +/- .05,
SEM
, p less than 0.05). There were no differences in the IgG/TP ratios.
Lung cancer
patients with a decreased serum albumin (less than 3.2 g/dl) had a significantly decreased SIgA/TP ratio in bronchial washings compared to patients with a higher serum albumin (.08 +/- .03 vs .18 +/- .04,
SEM
, p less than 0.05). The decreased relative concentration of airway SIgA in
lung cancer
patients may adversely affect airway defenses against bacterial colonization.
...
PMID:Airway secretory IgA concentrations in patients with lung cancer. Evaluation of the uninvolved lung. 272 Dec 63
Patients with bronchogenic carcinoma often have low serum zinc concentrations and sometimes have markedly elevated renal zinc losses. Since normal zinc metabolism is critical for the proper function of T lymphocytes and natural killer cells, the effect of zinc status on T cell phytohemagglutinin response and peripheral blood lymphocyte natural killer cell activity was studied in patients with
lung cancer
. Mean (+/-
SEM
) serum zinc concentration in 75 patients with cancer was 67.4 +/- 2.2 micrograms/dl versus 96.0 +/- 8.0 micrograms/dl for normal subjects. Patients with low serum zinc levels (less than 70 micrograms/dl) had significantly higher urine zinc excretion than patients with normal serum zinc levels (1,385 +/- 240 micrograms per 24 hours versus 392 +/- 107 micrograms per 24 hours) (p less than 0.001). This pattern of zinc concentrations (i.e., low serum zinc in combination with high urine zinc) is typical of patients with mild zinc deficiency, and suggests that a mild chronic zinc deficiency state was present in some of these patients. When lymphocyte data were analyzed according to serum zinc concentrations and urinary zinc excretion, low serum zinc concentration and high urine zinc excretion both correlated with depressed T cell phytohemagglutinin response (p less than 0.005 and p less than 0.001, respectively). For instance, mean maximal phytohemagglutinin response in patients with urinary zinc excretion of more than 700 micrograms per 24 hours was 22,132 +/- 3,201 cpm (n = 14) compared with 68,130 +/- 6,850 cpm for patients with normal zinc excretion (n = 7). Peripheral blood lymphocyte natural killer cell activity did not correlate with either serum or urine zinc values. Oral zinc sulfate (220 mg, three times daily for six weeks) was then administered to patients with hyperzincuria (mean = 992 micrograms per 24 hours). Zinc-supplemented patients had normalization of T cell phytohemagglutinin response after zinc therapy, whereas control patients demonstrated continued T cell dysfunction. Natural killer cell activity did not change in either group during the study period. These data suggest that a mild subclinical zinc deficiency state may exist in some patients with
lung cancer
and may be an important cause of abnormal T cell function. Furthermore, zinc supplementation may be useful to improve lymphocyte function in selected patients. Whether zinc supplementation would alter the course of the disease or the patient's prognosis is presently unknown.
...
PMID:Association between urinary zinc excretion and lymphocyte dysfunction in patients with lung cancer. 299 69
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