7 research outputs found
Prevention of residual urinary incontinence following successful repair of obstetric vesico-vaginal fistula using a fibro-muscular sling
Modified vaginal surgical technique for the management of the lateral vesico-vaginal fistulae
The effect of di-isopropyl 1,3 dithiol-2-ylidenemalonate (Malotilate) on the hepatic changes induced by ethanol administration in the rat
Hydroxyl Radicals are Generated by Hepatic Microsomes During Nadph Oxidation: Relationship to Ethanol Metabolism
A Preliminary Operational Classification System for Nonmutagenic Modes of Action for Carcinogenesis
This article proposes a system of categories for nonmutagenic modes of action for carcinogenesis. The classification is of modes of action rather than individual carcinogens, because the same compound can affect carcinogenesis in more than one way. Basically, we categorize modes of action as: (1) co-initiation (facilitating the original mutagenic changes in stem and progenitor cells that start the cancer process) (e.g. induction of activating enzymes for other carcinogens); (2) promotion (enhancing the relative growth vs differentiation/death of initiated clones (e.g. inhibition of growth-suppressing cell-cell communication); (3) progression (enhancing the growth, malignancy, or spread of already developed tumors) (e.g. suppression of immune surveillance, hormonally mediated growth stimulation for tumors with appropriate receptors by estrogens); and (4) multiphase (e.g., epigenetic silencing of tumor suppressor genes). A priori, agents that act at relatively early stages in the process are expected to manifest greater relative susceptibility in early life, whereas agents that act via later stage modes will tend to show greater susceptibility for exposures later in life. Copyright © 2008 Informa UK Ltd
