The entire colonic mucosa of 51 cases of colorectal carcinoma was examined histologically. Mucosal lesions including goblet cell hyperplasia, crypt dilatation, ulceration with regeneration, basal cell hyperplasia, metaplastic lesions, and adenomas were encountered. Goblet cell hyperplasia (80.4%) was most prominent adjacent to the carcinoma (transitional mucosa). Whether this represents a precancerous change is controversial. Crypt dilatation (57%) is considered a nonspecific change due to mucosal injury and indicates obstruction to the outlet of the crypts. Ulceration (6%) is often proximal to the carcinoma and is considered secondary to stasis and ischaemia due to obstruction. Basal cell hyperplasia is particularly prominent at the site of lymphoid follicles. It is suggested that the hyperplasia is a reactive response to the presence of stimuli in the intestinal content. It is observed that metaplastic lesions have their origin from these foci of basal cell hyperplasia. The presence of basal cell hyperplasia in metaplastic polyps (14%) indicates that they are active lesions in the process of formation and growth. The occurrence of metaplastic lesions may provide an indication of an adverse environment and a vulnerable mucosa. Adenomas have their origin from basal cells of colonic crypts. They are present in 47% of colorectal carcinoma. The findings support the view that adenomas are the most common and important precursor lesion associated with colorectal carcinoma in man. No de novo foci of malignant transformation was encountered but this does not exclude the possibility of de novo carcinogenesis of the colorectum.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:The differentiation between classic and atypical meningiomas may have implications in preoperative planning but may not be possible on the basis of conventional MR imaging. Our hypothesis was that classic and atypical meningiomas have different patterns of intratumoral water diffusion that will allow for differentiation between them.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Contrast leakage results in underestimation of the CBV of brain tumors. Our aim was to compare the diagnostic performance of DSC perfusion MR imaging without and with mathematic contrast-leakage correction in differentiating PCNSLs and glioblastomas.
A retrospective analysis was undertaken of the late complications observed in 4527 patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma treated by megavoltage radiotherapy during the years 1976-1985. Unconventional fractionation schedules were used because of serious resource limitations. The median equivalent doses were 65 Gy to the nasopharyngeal region and 53 Gy to the cervical region. 707 patients had reirradiation for local recurrences and 250 for regional relapses. The 10-year actuarial cancer-specific survival was 47%, and the corresponding all-complication-free and neurological-complication-free rates were 40% and 72%, respectively. Altogether, 1395 (31%) patients developed one or more late irradiation sequelae. The majority were mild soft-tissue damages, but 322 (7%) had significant functional disturbances, from which 62 (1%) died. Neurological damage that occurred in 450 (10%) patients constituted the major morbidity and accounted for all but three of the treatment mortalities. The cumulative incidence of the various complications is summarized, and the data recorded in the literature reviewed in order to give a proper perspective of the problem. Patients treated during 1981-1985 had a significantly higher actuarial encephalomyelopathy-free rate than those treated during 1976-1980, but the incidence-free rates for the other neurological complications remained unimproved, suggesting that the improvement could be mainly attributed to additional shielding for the brainstem rather than the reduction of dose from 3.8-4.2 Gy to 2.5 Gy per fraction.
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