23 research outputs found
Bioactivities of Ethanolic Extract and its Fractions of Cistus laurifolius L. (Cistaceae) and Salvia wiedemannii Boiss. (Lamiaceae) Species.
Cistus laurifolius L. (Cistaceae) and Salvia wiedemannii Boiss. (Lamiaceae) have been used for treatment of some illnesses in Turkish folk medicine. In the present study, the ethanolic extract and its fractions obtained using re-extraction by hexane (Hx), chloroform (CHCl3), butanol, and remaining-water (r-H2O) of C. laurifolius were screened for their in vitro bioactivities
Bioactivities of Ethanolic Extract and its Fractions of Cistus laurifolius L. (Cistaceae) and Salvia wiedemannii Boiss. (Lamiaceae) Species
Background: Cistus laurifolius L. (Cistaceae) and Salvia wiedemannii
Boiss. (Lamiaceae) have been used for treatment of some illnesses in
Turkish folk medicine. In the present study, the ethanolic extract and
its fractions obtained using re-extraction by hexane (Hx), chloroform
(CHCl3), butanol, and remaining-water (r-H2O) of C. laurifolius were
screened for their in vitro bioactivities. Materials and Methods:
Activities were determined against both standard and the isolated
strains of Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Proteus mirabilis,
Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, Staphylococcus aureus,
Enterococcus faecalis, as well as yeasts such as Candida albicans and
Candida parapsilosis by microdilution method. Also, antiviral activity
of C. laurifolius and S. wiedemannii extracts were tested on herpes
simplex virus-1 (HSV-1) and parainfluenza-3 (PI-3) using Madin-Darby
bovine kidney and vero cell lines. Results: Tested extracts of C.
laurifolius (minimum inhibitory concentration 32 mu g/mL) exerted a
strong antimicrobial activity against Gram-negative bacteria of E. coli,
P. mirabilis, K. pneumoniae, and A. baumannii. Conclusion: The Hx
extract of C. laurifolius (cytopathogenic effect of 32-8 mu g/mL) had
antiviral activity on PI-3. Also, the r-H2O, CHCl3, and ethanol extracts
(16-<0.25 mu g/mL) of S. wiedemannii had significant antiviral activity
on HSV-1, same as control
Renal biopsy: comparative yield of cranial versus caudal needle trajectory. An ex vivo analysis
AIM: To compare the diagnostic quality of tissue cores obtained using cranial and caudal angulation of the renal biopsy needle. Comparison was made in terms of the number of glomeruli and proportion of renal cortex with medulla on pathological analysis. METHODS: A total of 40 desktop, renal biopsies were performed on 10 ex vivo porcine kidneys using two different targeting angles. Biopsies were obtained from the 'lower pole' of each kidney using both cephalad and caudad angulations of the biopsy needle. Ten 18-gauge semi-automated cutting needles were used during twenty biopsies obtained per each angle; two biopsies were made using each needle. The resulting samples were collected in 40 separate and labelled formalin containers according to the used targeting angle. Two pathologists blinded to the corresponding biopsy angles reviewed the samples in consensus. RESULTS: Samples with a cephalad targeting angle had a mean length of 14.5 mm with mean number of 9.6 glomeruli and average 82% cortex and 18% medulla. Samples obtained using a caudad needle angulation had a mean length of 14.1 mm with mean number of 11.6 glomeruli and on the average 99% cortex. The P-values comparing the two samples were as follows: 0.63 comparing the mean length of cores, 0.08 for number of glomeruli and 0.002 comparing the proportion of cortex. CONCLUSION: The proportion of cortical tissue in the core biopsy specimen using the caudad angle approach was statistically significantly higher, compared with the cephalad needle trajectory
Renal biopsy: comparative yield of cranial versus caudal needle trajectory. An ex vivo analysis
AIM: To compare the diagnostic quality of tissue cores obtained using cranial and caudal angulation of the renal biopsy needle. Comparison was made in terms of the number of glomeruli and proportion of renal cortex with medulla on pathological analysis.
METHODS: A total of 40 desktop, renal biopsies were performed on 10 ex vivo porcine kidneys using two different targeting angles. Biopsies were obtained from the \u27lower pole\u27 of each kidney using both cephalad and caudad angulations of the biopsy needle. Ten 18-gauge semi-automated cutting needles were used during twenty biopsies obtained per each angle; two biopsies were made using each needle. The resulting samples were collected in 40 separate and labelled formalin containers according to the used targeting angle. Two pathologists blinded to the corresponding biopsy angles reviewed the samples in consensus.
RESULTS: Samples with a cephalad targeting angle had a mean length of 14.5 mm with mean number of 9.6 glomeruli and average 82% cortex and 18% medulla. Samples obtained using a caudad needle angulation had a mean length of 14.1 mm with mean number of 11.6 glomeruli and on the average 99% cortex. The P-values comparing the two samples were as follows: 0.63 comparing the mean length of cores, 0.08 for number of glomeruli and 0.002 comparing the proportion of cortex.
CONCLUSION: The proportion of cortical tissue in the core biopsy specimen using the caudad angle approach was statistically significantly higher, compared with the cephalad needle trajectory
Inflammatory Myofibroblastic Tumor of the Larynx: Case Report
Inflammatory Myofibroblastic Tumor is usually a benign tumor of
mesenchymal origin that is rarely found in the larynx. This case
explores the unique laryngeal location and presentation of this tumor as
well as the challenging radiographic and histologic findings.</jats:p
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration diagnosis of merkel cell carcinoma metastatic to the pancreas
Prognostic Assessment of <i>BRAF</i> Mutation in Preoperative Thyroid Fine-Needle Aspiration Specimens
Abstract
Objectives
We investigate the potential role of BRAF testing in guiding surgical intervention in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC).
Methods
Thyroid fine-needle aspiration (FNA) cases with available BRAF result and follow-up thyroidectomy for PTC were included in the study. Cytology and surgical diagnoses were correlated with BRAF status.
Results
There were 151 cases of thyroid FNA specimens with BRAF testing (70 mutant and 81 wild-type BRAF) and histologically confirmed unilateral, unifocal PTCs. There were no differences in age, sex, tumor size, or lymphovascular invasion on thyroidectomy specimens between mutant and wild-type BRAF cases. BRAF mutation was significantly associated with cytology diagnosis (P &lt; .001), PTC subtype (P &lt; .001), extrathyroidal extension (ETE) (P = .006), and higher tumor (T) stage (P = .04). However, an analysis within the histologic subtypes of PTC revealed no significant association between BRAF mutation and ETE or higher T stage. There was also no difference in central (P = .847) or lateral (p = 1) neck lymph node (LN) metastasis.
Conclusions
BRAF mutation identified in thyroid FNA specimens correlates with histologic subtypes but is not an independent factor for predicting PTC biological behavior and should not be used to guide the extent of LN dissection.
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