In the clinical study of prostate cancer, the effect of androgen ablation on glucose metabolism in cancer tissue has not been elucidated. The purpose of this study was to investigate the change in glucose utilization due to endocrine therapy for prostate adenocarcinoma. Ten patients with histologically proven prostate cancer were prospectively investigated with (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose and positron emission tomography (FDG PET) prior to and after the initiation of endocrine therapy. FDG uptake was calculated to measure glucose utilization in cancer tissue. The change in FDG accumulation was compared with changes in serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) level and prostate size. FDG accumulation in the prostate decreased in all patients 1-5 months after the initiation of hormone therapy. The serum PSA level and prostate size measured on computerized tomography (CT) also decreased in these periods. A decrease in FDG accumulation was also demonstrated in metastatic sites. In this study, there appeared to be a decrease in FDG uptake in prostate cancer after endocrine therapy not only in primary prostate cancer lesions but also at metastatic sites, suggesting that the glucose utilization by tumours was suppressed by androgen ablation.
These results suggest that naftopidil has an inhibitory effect on C-fiber afferents in the lumbosacral spinal cord, improving BC during the storage phase.
Results suggest that melatonin increases bladder capacity via gamma-aminobutyric acid(A) receptor in the brain and decreases urine volume. Thus, melatonin could be beneficial for nocturia via a central nervous system effect.
Results indicate that cyclooxygenase inhibitors suppress adenosine triphosphate release from bladder epithelium via decreasing prostaglandin E(2). EP1 and/or EP3 receptors appear to participate in this effect.
Hematuria is a commonly encountered symptom of a wide spectrum of diseases, including calculi, tumors, and vascular abnormalities. In rare cases, hematuria is caused by life-threatening vascular diseases. When hematuria is encountered, physicians sometimes fail to include vascular diseases in the differential diagnosis because of their rare association with hematuria. Likewise, radiologists often fail to do so because of the low frequency of occurrence of these diseases. Multidetector computed tomography performed with the bolus injection technique should be the first-line diagnostic test when vascular disease is suspected. Radiologists should be familiar with the various imaging findings of hematuria caused by vascular disease. They should also be familiar with the management options (including endovascular techniques) for hematuria caused by vascular disease, since in some cases affected patients can be treated with interventional procedures.
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