To the surgeon, congenital abnormalities of the error in diagnosis and be capable of complicating blood-supply of abdominal viscera and variations operative procedures. in the position and structure of these organs are ofThe following three cases illustrate an unusual considerable importance. This is so because such type of anomaly in which the small intestine lies contents displayed. attachments of the sac wall in both cases (ac, ascending colon ; dc, descending colon). vertical attachments of the sac wall (St, stomach ; D, duodenum ; T, transverse colon ; B, bladder ; R, rectum).
A total of 208 plasma samples from 115 patients with gastrointestinal carcinomas and nine patients with other intestinal disease were examined for the presence of IgE tumor antibodies by a solid-phase radioimmunoassay. Approximately one-third of the patients gave significant reactions with gastrointestinal carcinoma extracts compared with normal tissue extracts. Absorption with tumor and normal tissue extracts, with type AB human red cells, and with CEA indicated tumor specificity in some of the samples so examined. None of the 50 serum samples tested from normal blood donors contained tumor-specific IgE. IgE tumor antibodies decreased or completely disappeared in the majority of patients 8-13 days after surgical treatment.
Metastatic tumors from livers of 5 patients with gastrointestinal carcinomas and from the liver of 1 patient with malignant breast carcinoma were extracted with 3 M KCl; similar extracts were prepared from normal human colon and liver and from human fetal gut. The extracts were depleted of serum globulins by passage through reverse immunoadsorbent columns consisting of rabbit antibodies to the F(ab)2 fragment of human IgG and were then coupled to CNBr-activated paper disks. These "antigen" disks were used in a radioimmunoassay, with the aid of 125I-labeled rabbit antihuman F(ab')2 antibodies for the assay of circulating tumor antibodies produced by cancer patients. Statistical evaluation of the results with plasma samples from 47 patients with colorectal carcinomas and from 7 patients with other gastrointestinal disorders (polyps, villous papilloma, diverticulitis, and Crohn's disease) indicated that a significant number of patients had antibodies to cross-reactive tumor antigen(s). The cross-reactive tumor antigen(s) involved in the reaction was not detected in extracts of the gastrointestinal tract from 12-week human fetuses and did not cross-react with carcinoembryonic antigen.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.