A 58-year-old female exhibited the onset of symmetrical sensory abnormalities of the face and extremities. The neurological examination revealed normal muscle strength with abated or absent tendon reflexes. The patient experienced symmetrical glove- and stocking-type pinprick sensations in the distal extremities and a loss of temperature sensation, but had normal proprioception and vibration senses and joint topesthesia. The lumbar puncture showed protein cell separation at the fifth week after the onset of symptoms. At the same time-point, the electrophysiological examination showed demyelination changes involving the trigeminal nerve and the somatic motor nerve. Needle electromyography revealed normal results. The clinical symptoms ceased progression at the fourth week after symptom onset, and began to improve from the sixth. This case was considered to be sensory Guillain-Barré syndrome, which was characterized by its cranial nerve involvement.
Background Galectin-9 is a member of the galectin family and has been reported to have a tumor-promoting or antitumor effect in response to the immune microenvironment. However, the immunomodulatory effect of galectin-9 in colorectal cancer (CRC) remains unclear. The antigen presentation and antitumor immune effects of galectin-9 in CRC were examined in this study. Methods The expression of galectin-9, dendritic cell markers (CD208 and CD1a), T-cell markers (CD3 and CD8) and mismatch repair proteins (MLH1, PMS2, MSH2, and MSH6) was assessed using immunohistochemistry in CRC samples. The correlation between galectin-9 and immune cells or immunomodulatory factors was also evaluated via multiple gene expression databases. Results The level of galectin-9 was decreased in mismatch repair-proficient patients compared with mismatch repair-deficient patients (p = 0.0335). GSEA showed that the regulatory mechanism of galectin-9 in CRC was related to a variety of immune pathways. Galectin-9 expression was strongly correlated with immune cell infiltration and immunomodulators (all p < 0.0001). In the relationship between galectin-9 expression and the infiltration of DCs, there was a negative correlation in CD1a + immature DCs (R = -0.263, p = 0.042). A strong positive correlation was observed in CD208 + mature DCs (R = 0.391, p < 0.01). Patients with high galectin-9 expression also exhibited abundant CD8 + T-cell and CD3 + T-cell infiltration. Conclusion Collectively, our findings provide evidence that galectin-9 may increase the antitumor immune response of patients with CRC. DCs play an important role in galectin-9-mediated antitumor immune responses, which provides further insight into the development of immunotherapy.
Bilateral medial medullary infarction (BMMI) is an extremely rare type of cerebrovascular accident often resulting in poor functional consequences. “Heart appearance” on diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the unique presentation of BMMI. In this article, we present an acute ischemic stroke patient whose brain MRI showed the atypical “heart appearance” sign, manifested unusual bilateral central facial paralysis concurrently. For an early diagnosis of BMMI, it is essential to recognize the characteristic clinical and MRI findings of this rare type of stroke. Abnormal small dot or linear DWI signal at the midline of the brainstem should not be ignored at the early stage of stroke.
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