Three major issues drive the cross-cultural use of virtual patients (VPs): an increased mobility of healthcare professionals, students and patients; limited resources for developing VPs; and emerging standards for the exchange of VPs across institutions. Many students are trained in countries other than where they were born. In addition, healthcare professionals often move between countries and are today meeting more and more patients from cultures different from their own. VPs can be used both for learning a new "medical" language as well as for illustrating different perspectives on illness in the new culture. Therefore, it may be important to develop cases reflecting patients from a wide variety of regions and cultures to prepare these professionals to understand both the background of these patients as well as the different medical conditions they may present. However, the benefits of using VPs may be limited at many universities by insufficient resources to develop all the VPs needed for their curricula. The option to acquire VPs from other universities may therefore be appealing, but as these may only be available in English, it is important to consider whether VPs reflecting the local illness panoramas and medical procedures are needed.
Renal cancer (RC) represents 3% of all cancers, with a 2% annual increase in incidence worldwide, opening the discussion about the need for screening. However, no established screening tool currently exists for RC. To tackle this issue, we assessed surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) profiling of serum as a liquid biopsy strategy to detect renal cell carcinoma (RCC), the most prevalent histologic subtype of RC. Thus, serum samples were collected from 23 patients with RCC and 27 controls (CTRL) presenting with a benign urological pathology such as lithiasis or benign prostatic hypertrophy. SERS profiling of deproteinized serum yielded SERS band spectra attributed mainly to purine metabolites, which exhibited higher intensities in the RCC group, and Raman bands of carotenoids, which exhibited lower intensities in the RCC group. Principal component analysis (PCA) of the SERS spectra showed a tendency for the unsupervised clustering of the two groups. Next, three machine learning algorithms (random forest, kNN, naïve Bayes) were implemented as supervised classification algorithms for achieving discrimination between the RCC and CTRL groups, yielding an AUC of 0.78 for random forest, 0.78 for kNN, and 0.76 for naïve Bayes (average AUC 0.77 ± 0.01). The present study highlights the potential of SERS liquid biopsy as a diagnostic and screening strategy for RCC. Further studies involving large cohorts and other urologic malignancies as controls are needed to validate the proposed SERS approach.
The perirectal fasciae and their vascular and neural relationships were studied based on the dissection of 46 fresh cadavers. The rectal fascia is a tubular sleeve, areolar in nature, which houses the superior rectal vessels and lymphatics. The nerves which supply fibres to the pelvic plexus run close to the rectum, contained in the urogenital and presacral fasciae. The rectum is attached to these two fasciae by the rectal stalks, which take a spiral course round the rectum, being posterolateral in the upper rectum, lateral in the mid-rectum and anterolateral in the lower rectum. During rectal resection the pelvic nn. may be preserved if the rectal dissection proceeds close to the rectal fascia. After cutting the rectal insertion of the presacral fascia, the lower rectal stalks (paraproctium) come into direct view and can be divided close to the rectal wall with no risk of damage to the pelvic plexus.
Standardized treatment protocols are hindered by the rarity of the PCas. However, literature concludes that optimal debulking is mandatory, whereas the efficacy of adjuvant chemotherapy remains to be elucidated.
The study shows that phonon-phonon interactions following laser photoexcitation of gold nanoparticles exhibit increased intracellular uptake, as well as mitochondrial swelling, closely followed by mitochondrial inner membrane permeabilization and depolarization. This unique data may represent a major step in mitochondria-targeted anticancer therapies using laser-activated gold nanoparticles.
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