Metoidioplasty Djinovic, Rados P
Clinics in plastic surgery,
07/2018, Letnik:
45, Številka:
3
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Transmasculine gender confirmation surgery remains challenging and demanding. As there is no perfect or standard procedure for creating male genitalia, practitioners continue to strive for better ...solutions. There are 2 goals in the surgical treatment of transgender persons: removal of the native genitalia and secondary sexual characteristics and creation of the desired genitalia and secondary sexual characteristics. In transmen, this often means removal of the uterus, fallopian tubes, ovaries, and vagina and creation of the external genitalia. This article highlights metoidioplasty. Metoidioplasty with simultaneous removal of the internal genitalia may be performed in a single procedure.
Aim
To describe an in vitro experimental model of cystic structure formation to conduct research on radicular cyst development.
Methodology
To form spheroid structures, various numbers (1 × 104, ...5 × 104 or 1 × 105) of epithelial cells (HaCaT and Cal27) were seeded in 96‐well plates previously coated with 1.5% low‐melting agarose. After 24 h, the spheroids were collected, embedded in 3D collagen matrix and transferred to 24‐well plates previously coated with polymerized collagen and kept for up to 21 days. Images of spheroids were captured at each time‐point (1, 5, 9, 15 and 21 days), and samples underwent histological and confocal microscopy analyses. Spheroid area, perimeter and cell dispersion were measured. One‐way Anova was used for statistical analysis.
Results
Both epithelial cell lines were able to generate regular and circular spheroids after 24 h of incubation regardless of cell density. Spheroid structures in the collagen matrix were uniform in most samples until day 15, when several spots that appeared to be new cultures were seen. Spheroids from HaCaT were significantly more stable than those from Cal27 (P < 0.05). Starting on the third day, the examination of histological sections revealed a cavity with epithelial lining morphology, similar to a pathological radicular cyst.
Conclusions
This study describes an experimental model of cystogenesis in vitro that may be used to test theories and investigates the effects of different growth factors during cyst development and maintenance.
B-flavor tagging at Belle II Akopov, N.; Banerjee, Sw; Bauer, M. ...
The European physical journal. C, Particles and fields,
04/2022, Letnik:
82, Številka:
4
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
We report on new flavor tagging algorithms developed to determine the quark-flavor content of bottom (
) mesons at Belle II. The algorithms provide essential inputs for measurements of quark-flavor ...mixing and charge-parity violation. We validate and evaluate the performance of the algorithms using hadronic
decays with flavor-specific final states reconstructed in a data set corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 62.8 fb
-
1
, collected at the
resonance with the Belle II detector at the SuperKEKB collider. We measure the total effective tagging efficiency to be
ε
eff
=
(
30.0
±
1.2
(
stat
)
±
0.4
(
syst
)
)
%
for a category-based algorithm and
ε
eff
=
(
28.8
±
1.2
(
stat
)
±
0.4
(
syst
)
)
%
for a deep-learning-based algorithm.
The effects of drugs of abuse on oral mucosa are only partly understood. The aims of the present study were to: (1) evaluate the frequency of nuclear changes in normal-appearing oral mucosa of ...alcoholics and crack cocaine users and (2) assess their association with cell proliferation rate. Oral smears were obtained from the border of the tongue and floor of the mouth of 26 crack cocaine users (24 males and 2 females), 29 alcoholics (17 males and 12 females), and 35 controls (17 males and 18 females). Histological slides were submitted to Feulgen staining to assess the frequency of micronuclei (MN), binucleated cells (BN), broken eggs (BE), and karyorrhexis (KR). A significant increase in the frequency of MN was observed in cells exfoliated from the tongue of crack cocaine users (p = 0.01), and alcoholics showed a higher frequency of KR in cells obtained from the floor of the mouth (p = 0.01). Our findings suggest that the use of crack cocaine induces clastogenic effects, whereas alcoholism is associated with higher degrees of keratinization in the floor of the mouth.
Autophagy analysis in oral carcinogenesis de Lima, T.B.; Paz, A.H.R.; Rados, P.V. ...
Pathology, research and practice,
09/2017, Letnik:
213, Številka:
9
Journal Article
Recenzirano
The aim of this study was to evaluate the levels of autophagy in oral leukoplakia and squamous cell carcinoma and to correlate with clinical pathological features, as well as, the evolution of these ...lesions.
7 Normal oral mucosa, 51 oral leukoplakias, and 120 oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCC) were included in the study. Histological sections of the mucosa and leukoplakias were evaluated throughout their length, while the carcinomas were evaluated using Tissue Microarray. After the immunohistochemical technique, LC3-II positive cells were quantified in the different epithelial layers of the mucosa and leukoplakias and in the microarrays of the squamous cell carcinomas. The correlation between positive cells with the different clinical-pathological variables and with the evolution of the lesions was tested using the t test, ANOVA, and Kaplan-Meier survival analysis.
We observed increased levels of autophagy in the oral squamous cell carcinomas (p<0.001) in relation to the other groups, but without any association with poorer evolution or survival of these patients. Among the leukoplakias, we observed a higher percentage of positive cells in the intermediate layer of the dysplastic leukoplakias (p=0.0319) and in the basal layer of lesions with poorer evolution (p=0.0133).
The levels of autophagy increased during the process of oral carcinogenesis and are correlated with poorer behavior of the leukoplakias.
Background
Cancer is a multifactorial disease composed of cells that show somatic mutations and epigenetic changes. The aim of this study was to investigate the expression of proteins involved in the ...development and maintenance of epithelia, cell cycle regulation, and apoptosis in human oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) tissue samples.
Methods
A tissue microarray containing 65 primary human OSCC specimens was immunolabeled for bcl‐2, survivin, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), p21, p53, p63, and cleaved caspase‐3.
Results
Samples were scored for percentage of positively stained tumor cells and staining intensity. A total immunostaining score was also calculated, using the product of percentage and intensity scores. All specimens showed high scores, > 75%, for p63 and survivin, and 75.4% of the specimens also presented high EGFR expression. All cases showed p53‐positive cells. p21 showed a diffuse staining pattern. The percentage of cells positive for cleaved caspase‐3 and bcl‐2 was low.
Conclusions
The high frequency of tumor cells expressing p63 and survivin highlights the role of these proteins in the malignant transformation of oral epithelium. Collectively, our results suggest that p63 and survivin may constitute attractive targets for cancer therapy in patients with OSCC.
OBJECTIVES
To report our experience of treating severe penile injuries with different causes and treatments, as penile trauma presents a difficult physical and psychological problem, and the type and ...extent of injury varies from mild to severe, sometimes even with total amputation.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
We analysed retrospectively 43 patients (mean age 28 years, range 5–52 years) with severe penile injuries referred to us from March 1999 to August 2007. The causes of penile injuries differed, including iatrogenic trauma (20), traffic accidents (11), burns (three), self‐amputation (two), ritual circumcision (two), penile fracture (two), gunshot trauma (two) and electrocution (one). The management required a wide variety of surgical techniques tailored to each patient depending on the type and extent of injury.
RESULTS
The mean (range) follow‐up was 47 (10–108) months. The aesthetic and functional results, including satisfactory sexual intercourse were good in 35 patients. There were complications in seven patients; infection after implanting an inflatable penile prosthesis in one, protrusion of a semirigid prosthesis in one, urethral complications (one stenosis and two fistulae) in three and partial skin flap necrosis in two.
CONCLUSIONS
Severe penile injuries should be treated on an individual basis, applying different techniques. However, treatment can be effective and safe only in specialized centres.
The aim of this research was to assess the expression of aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1) and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), and to ...correlate them with the clinical and histopathological parameters of a patient cohort with follow-up over an 8-year period.
For this, seventeen HNSCC and non-neoplastic adjacent epithelium (AE) samples were subjected to laser microdissection and real-time PCR to evaluate the mRNA expression of ALDH1, E-cadherin (E-CAD), N-cadherin (N-CAD), and vimentin (VIM). Also, immunohistochemistry was performed for ALDH1, E-CAD, N-CAD, and VIM in the tumor center (TC), invasion front (IF), and AE of the seventeen samples. Mann-Whitney, Kruskal-Wallis and Chi-square tests were used to correlate the mRNA and immunohistochemical expression with different variables, considering p<0.05. Kaplan-Meier curves were produced for local recurrence, regional metastasis and treatment.
A mRNA overexpression of ALDH1 in primary tumors was associated with regional metastasis and a high ALDH1 immunostaining was related to metastasis and a worse patient outcome. Additionally, a favorable outcome was associated with the transition phase and an unfavorable outcome was associated with EMT event. An overall 26.9 months was observed with longer survival associated with surgery and radiotherapy.
However, due to the intense variability inherent to the indicator proteins in the EMT process, the complete profile markers related to this biological process should be continuous investigated.
Objective
To assess the level of maturation and proliferation of epithelial cells and the correlation with immunocytochemical expression of adhesion (E‐cadherin) and cell differentiation (involucrin) ...markers.
Methods
Cytopathological samples were obtained from four groups of patients: control (CG, n=30); alcohol/tobacco (ATG, n=31), leucoplakia (LG, n=31), and squamous cell carcinoma (SCCG, n=22). Cytopathological smears were collected from all groups for AgNOR, Papanicolaou and immunocytochemical staining.
Results
There was an increase in anucleated cells in ATG compared to CG and in LG compared to lesion‐free groups (P<.05). In addition, there was a higher rate of intermediate cells in lesion‐free groups than in LG (P=.001). When these findings were correlated with positive E‐cadherin expression, there was a smaller number of anucleated and intermediate cells (P<.05). The proliferation rate was higher in the SCCG than in the CG (P<.05) and in the ATG compared to LG (P<.05). Moreover, cell proliferation increased in the presence of positive E‐cadherin expression in the ATG and LG. No statistically significant results were obtained for involucrin analysis.
Conclusion
Cytopathology combined with quantitative techniques such as Papanicolaou, AgNOR, and immunocytochemical expression of E‐cadherin detects changes associated with oral carcinogenesis. The innovative approach used in this study allows assessing the expression of cell adhesion (E‐cadherin) and differentiation (involucrin) markers by means of oral mucosal cytopathology. The E‐cadherin imunocytochemical expression indicated changes associated with the oral carcinogenesis process. An increase in cell proliferation rate in oral squamous cell carcinoma group was associated with the lower immunoexpression of E‐cadherin. Cytopathology combined with quantitative techniques and immunocytochemical expression of E‐cadherin may detect early alterations associated with oral carcinogenesis.
Purpose Surgical anatomy of the epispadiac penis is still not fully described. Using our complete disassembly technique, we discovered some anatomical features of epispadiac penis that may have ...significant impact on surgical outcome. Materials and Methods A total of 52 patients 2 days to 19 years old (mean age 43 months) underwent primary repair of epispadias between October 1996 and December 2006. After complete penile disassembly, ie full mobilization of the corporeal bodies, neurovascular bundles and urethral plate, reassembly of the penile entities was done. The urethral plate is tubularized and ventralized. The corporeal bodies are straightened and lengthened by 2 transverse incisions and grafting, joined medially and fixed to the glans cap. The glans is reconstructed, and the neurovascular bundles are moved dorsally and joined. The skin is reconstructed using different local flaps. Results Investigating the anatomical features of the epispadiac penis, we discovered several distinguishing features. The corporeal bodies are separated and triangular in shape. They represent the main substrate of dorsal curvature due to the significant disproportion in length between the long ventral and short wedge-shaped dorsal sides. The length of the neurovascular bundles is determined by their course—they are longer if they overlie the ventral side of the corpora and shorter if positioned over the dorsal side. The skin between the scrotum and penis has characteristics similar to penile skin. A good functional and esthetic outcome was achieved in 46 patients. Erection and glanular sensitivity were preserved in all patients. There was no necrosis of the glans or corporeal bodies. Complications included urethral fistula in 4 patients, stenosis in 2 and mild residual curvature in 2. Conclusions New insights into the anatomical features of the epispadiac penis can have a significant impact on surgical outcomes.