The reinnervated mushroom-shaped anterolateral thigh perforator flap was found to be an innovative and effective option for subtotal tongue reconstruction.
Epidemiologic and biomolecular evidence suggests that human papillomavirus (HPV) infection may be associated with the development of head and neck cancers. To clarify the role of HPV in larynx carcinoma, 25 patients were studied for the presence of viral DNA, possible virus integration into the cellular genome, and viral expression both in neoplastic tissues and in neighbouring normal mucosa. Twelve of 25 patients with neoplasia (48%) showed negative results for HPV sequences, and 13 (52%) showed positive results. Among the latter group of patients, seven were HPV-16 positive, five were HPV-6, and one was HPV-45. No multiple infections were detected. The physical status of the HPV genome was analysed by three methods: polymerase chain reaction (PCR), bidimensional agarose gel electrophoresis, and in situ hybridisation. Viral integration into the host genome occurred in 43% of cases of HPV-16 and in 20% of cases of HPV-6. Viral RNA expression was detected by reverse transcription-PCR only in HPV-16-positive tumours. The pattern of expression was consistent with an active role of HPV in cellular transformation. In conclusion, the present work suggests that HPV infection may be involved in some cases of laryngeal carcinoma. However, the transformation mechanisms might be different from those currently accepted for anogenital cancers.
The expression of p53 and bcl-2 proteins by immunohistochemistry and the identification of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection by a non-isotopic polymerase chain reaction (PCR)based method were investigated in 30 patients with head and neck cancer. Ten cases were HPV-positive (33%), mostly as double or multiple infections by high- or intermediate-risk types. Twenty-one patients were p53-positive (70%), 9/10 with HPV-positive tumours and 12/20 with HPV-negative tumours; this difference was not statistically significant. Only four cases were bcl-2-positive, irrespective of the presence of either HPV or p53. No correlation was found between these biological factors and tumour stage, differentiation grade, and alcohol or tobacco use. Our findings indicate that p53 is involved in the majority of cases, bcl-2 is rare, and high-risk HPV could play a key role, especially in tumours of tongue and tonsil. In conclusion p53 and bcl-2 protein expression and the presence of HPV infection are independent events in these malignancies.
Reversed pH gradient is an intrinsic feature of tumor phenotype resulting from an upregulation of glycolysis. This is crucial for tumor cell proliferation, invasion, metastasis, drug resistance, and apoptosis. Comprehension of mechanisms of pH regulation in tumors is of paramount importance for therapeutic implications. This is a preliminary report of a larger prospective study dedicated to the measurements of neutral or slightly alkaline pH/extracellular pH (pHi/pHe) in human patients affected by tumors of the head and neck. During surgery, four specimens were obtained from six patients with cancer: two from the tumor site and two from contralateral areas or sane areas near the tumor. pHe and pHi were measured and compared within normal and neoplastic tissues. Our data indicate that human spontaneous tumors show similar reversed gradients as observed in previous analysis on animal tumor models and cell lines.
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