The rat meniscal transection model of OA reproducibly displays both osteochondral and synovial angiogenesis comparable to our previous observations in human knee OA. DH guinea pigs, by contrast, display low vascularity throughout their protracted course of OA development. Changes in vascularisation occur early during the development of OA in the rat, and may contribute to the pathogenesis of OA.
The western US region is heavily reliant on spring snowmelt for much of its annual water supply. However, rising temperatures across the region over the latter half of the twentieth century have reduced snowpack accumulation, snowmelt timing and magnitude, especially at lower elevations. Water resource planners must be prepared to understand and counter the possible consequences resulting from a continuation in rising air temperatures on snowmelt and streamflow into the twenty-first century. This review aims to thoroughly analyse what tools and techniques are available to monitor and plan for such changes. A historical analysis of snowmelt trends in response to increasing air temperatures is followed by a review of methods used to forecast the effects of future changes in air temperature on snowmelt processes along with both general approaches to snowmelt modelling and different snowmelt models themselves. The techniques and methods to be ultimately employed will depend greatly upon data availability and on the scale at which they are to be applied.
Male breast carcinomas are probably hormone-dependent, but receptor studies are few because this is a relatively rare tumour. We have studied 21 cases of male breast carcinoma immunohistochemically for oestrogen receptor (ER) and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) expression employing the antibodies ER-ICA and 12E on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded material. In our series, 86 per cent of male breast cancers were ER-positive and 76 per cent were EGFR-positive. Male breast carcinomas do not exhibit the inverse correlation between ER and EGFR expression that characterizes female breast carcinomas. Owing to the limitations of a small series, we were unable to comment on the relationship between ER and EGFR expression and patient survival. However, the relatively high incidence of ER expression may provide a growth advantage for this tumour in a male environment characterized by low levels of oestrogen. In addition, high EGFR expression may also contribute to a poor prognosis independent of ER status.
As c-erbB-2 expression increases the rate of dying by 4.2 times, recording its expression by these tumours may be useful in selecting patients who would benefit from treatment in stage A1 (T1a) disease.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.