Chemilumenescence (CL) occurs due to the phagocytosis of bacteria and of tumor cells by polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN). Levels of CL were measured in patients with prostatic cancer and from normal subjects. Patients with advanced disease (stage C, D) showed no elevated CL levels as compared to healthy individuals or patients with minimal disease (stage A, B). Following external radiation therapy in patients with stage A-C prostatic carcinoma high levels of CL were recorded. Estrogen medication also resulted in increased CL levels, while estramustine did not affect phagocytic activity. Intradermal BCG vaccination caused increased PMN activity. Progressive prostatic cancer in hormone treated patients was associated with increased CL as compared to patients with stable or regressive disease.
This is a report on an epithelial inclusion cyst covering the septal leaflet of the tricuspid valve. The tumor was an accidental finding in a 5 1/2 years-old boy with congenital heart disease including double-chambered right ventricle, ventricular and atrial septal defects and subvalvular aortic stenosis. Histological examination showed a two-layered ciliated epithelium, typically present in the respiratory system. Embryologic tissue heterotopia arising from sequestered entodermal elements from the primitive foregut during cardiac organogenesis is a possible explanation for the locality and histology of the tumor. To our knowledge, a similar case has never been presented before.
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