Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (mast cell)
14,925 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Problems of arrhythmogenic sudden death (ASD) in athletes have been re-assessed on the clinicopathological plane, encompassing the emerging, unsolved, question of so-called idiopathic ventricular tachycardia, and its debated diagnostics versus arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia-cardiopathy. Ischemic-infarction ASD from coronary artery pathology in young athletes has been seen to present with atherosclerotic "soft" subintimal plaques, rich in newly formed smooth myocytes, often attended by adventitial mast cell, as suspect microscopic markers of spasm, relevant to reperfusion; these features can be found also in precociously intramural arteries, responsible for ASD. Rare congenital abnormalities of the coronary ostia occasionally underlie ASD, together with the acquired aneurysmic coronaritis of chronic Kawasaki disease. Ischemic ASD can also be due to coronary arteriolopathy attending hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a not uncommon disease in athletes, to be carefully discriminated from training heart hypertrophy. Young South-American sportsmen with Chagas' chronic cardiopathy seem to be at particular risk of ASD. Minor, but specific arrhythmogenic cardiac malformations such as accessory AV pathways have been detected in athletes succumbing to otherwise unexplained ASD, undergone careful post-mortem investigation. The need of more attentive and extended histopathologic control emerges from the hitherto ignored cardiac neuropathological substrates of reflexogenic ASD, which is cogent to problems of ASD in competing athletes. The thorough examination of the cardiac vascular centers in the brain stem, and of the peripheral cardiac innervation, at either abutments of the arc of dive- and/or Bezold-Jarisch cardioinhibitory-vasodepressor reflex, made it possible to suggest novel clinicopathological explanations in controversial cases of athletes' ASD, safeguarding from grave leval misjudgements due to sport's forensic medical mistakes.
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PMID:Structural and non-structural disease underlying high-risk cardiac arrhythmias relevant to sports medicine. 750 Jun 31

A 13-year-old, castrated male Maine Coon cat was presented to Oklahoma State University Boren Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital for yearly echocardiographic examination monitoring hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) diagnosed in 2003. Physical examination revealed a heart murmur and premature beats, likely related to HCM, but was otherwise unremarkable. A biochemistry profile revealed a hyperglobulinemia (6.3 g/dL). Cytologic examination of fine-needle aspirates from liver and spleen revealed increased numbers of plasma cells and mast cells, confirmed with subsequent histologic examination. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) for c-kit in the spleen and liver showed mast cells predominantly exhibiting type I staining pattern, with moderate numbers exhibiting type II pattern in spleen, and scattered cells exhibiting type II and III patterns in liver. Bone marrow cytology and core biopsy documented approximately 22% plasma cells. Cutaneous masses on the cat's left shoulder and right carpus were cytologically confirmed mast cell tumors. Serum protein electrophoresis with immunofixation confirmed an IgG monoclonal gammopathy. This is an example of 2 hematologic neoplasms occurring simultaneously in a cat. Concurrent pathologies may be overlooked if a single disease is diagnosed and suspected of causing all clinical signs. Both neoplasms were well differentiated, and neoplastic cells could have easily been interpreted as a reactive population had a full workup not been performed. Missing either diagnosis could result in a potentially lethal outcome. Eleven months after diagnoses, the cat was clinically doing well following a splenectomy and oral prednisolone and chlorambucil chemotherapy. Globulins decreased to 4.9 g/dL.
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PMID:Concurrent multiple myeloma and mast cell neoplasia in a 13-year-old castrated male Maine Coon cat. 2806 62