SummaryHead and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) involves the upper aerodigestive tract and can destroy the structure and function of organs involved in voice, speech, taste, smell and hearing, as well as vital structures necessary for survival. HNSCC has long been a treatment challenge because of the high rate of recurrences and of advanced disease at the time of diagnosis. Molecular identification of tissue biomarkers in diagnostic biopsy specimens may not only identify patients at risk for developing HNSCC but may also select patients that may benefit from more aggressive treatment modalities. Several biomarkers studied to date such as the proteins p53, cyclin D1, p16, Cox-2 enzyme, epidermal growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor receptors, matrix metalloproteinases and the Fhit marker for genomic instability could be manipulated for the therapeutic benefit of these patients. This review presents the most updated information on molecular biomarkers with the greatest prognostic potential in HNSCC and discusses some factors that contribute to the controversy concerning their prognostic importance.
Mucoepid ermoid carcinoma of the nasal cavity is rare. We report the case of a 57-year-old man who was evaluated fo r a rapidly enlarging subcutaneous mass on the nasal bridge. The tumor was diagnosed as a mucoepidermoid carcinoma. The patient underwent extensive surgical resection and postoperative radiotherapy, but 5 months later he required orbital exenteration fo r persistellt disease. Despite these radical measures, the patient died with persistent disease 9 months following the initial evaluation. The aggressive behavio r of this tumor highlights the need fo r physicians to be aware ofthe diffe rential diagnosis, symptoms, and signs of neoplasm s that originate in the nasal cavity so that prompt treatment can be instituted.
Glycogen storage disease confined to the heart due to cardiac phosphorylase kinase deficiency causes a fatal infantile cardiomyopathy. Cardiomegaly can be detected in utero and is progressive. Electrocardiographic and echocardiographic findings are characteristic but not specific; these include large QRS complexes, short PR interval, and a hypertrophic nonobstructive pattern. Conclusive diagnosis requires biochemical analysis of myocardium, which may not be possible premortem due to the amount of tissue required. Pathologic examination of a standard cardiac biopsy can provide a presumptive diagnosis. There is no current treatment except a heart transplant. Infants succumb to heart failure and/or respiratory compromise due to pulmonary compression. This is a rare entity; only three cases have been reported to our knowledge. We report two additional cases.
A preterm boy was born at 34 weeks. Prenatal ultrasonography showed oligohydramnios, fetal ascites, large kidneys, and small thorax. He died 21 h after birth of respiratory insufficiency. Autopsy revealed Potter's-like facies, hypoplastic lungs, ascites, and bilateral nephromegaly (renal weight almost 10 times normal). The kidneys were finely nodular externally, solid, and cerebriform on cut section. Histologically, they showed a diffusely distorted architecture of jumbled lobules, hyperplasia of cortical-type tissue with inconspicuous proximal tubules, relative hypoplasia of medullary tissue, tubulointerstitial dysplasia, and perilobar nephrogenic rests. The renal features represent a variety of the universal or panlobar (also called pancortical or infantile) type of nephroblastomatosis. To our knowledge, this is only the third such case reported. In the brain, each lateral ventricle contained a yellow gelatinous mass. Histologically, the masses consisted of a pseudomyxoid matrix with delicate fibers and focal adipocyte clusters, all confined within choroid plexus. We consider these lesions fibrolipomatous hamartomas.
Vibrio vulnificus is responsible for severe infections in chronically ill patients. Organ transplant recipients are also at risk for severe infections due to V vulnificus. We report here the first case of V. vulnificus primary bacteremia due to raw shellfish consumption in a liver transplant recipient. All transplant patients should be cautioned against consuming uncooked seafood and warned about the risk of severe Vibrio infections from seemingly innocuous wounds acquired in a salt water environment.
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.