Purpose: To assess the value of multi-tumor marker protein chips in the diagnosis and treatment of ovarian cancer. Materials and Methods: Twelve tumor markers (CA19-9, NSE, CEA, CA242, CK19, β-HCG, AFP, SCC, c-PSA, CA125, CA724 and CA15-3) were detected by protein biochip in 220 patients with ovarian carcinomas, 205 with benign ovarian tumors and 200 healthy subjects. Results: The positivity rate was obviously higher in ovarian cancer (77.7%), than that in the benign cases (26.3%, p<0.01) and healthy subjects (4.5%, p<0.01). Serum levels of tumor markers were furthermore significantly higher in cases with lymph node metastasis (86.8%) than those without metastasis (44.7%), p<0.01. Conclusions: Multi-tumor marker protein chips provide important assistance in the diagnosis and treatment evaluation in ovarian cancers.
Rationale:
Primary cranial vault lymphoma (PCVL) is an extremely rare extranodal lymphoma in the skull. This case study investigates the clinical features, so as to improve the understanding of the diagnosis and therapy.
Patient concerns:
A 31-year-old male presented painful scalp mass at the site of 1-month-old head trauma.
Diagnosis:
The final diagnosis was plasma cell lymphoma, which is a rare subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma based on biopsy and immunohistochemistry findings.
Interventions:
The patient received total tumor resection in combination with chemotherapy
Outcomes:
The patient survived without signs of systemic dissemination for 12 months after surgery at the time of last follow-up.
Lessons:
Trauma may be one of the factors that induce PCVL. The final diagnosis of PCVL depends on pathology and immunohistochemistry findings. A combined treatment of surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy can achieve favorable outcomes.
Objective. Ischemic cerebrovascular disease is a commonly seen vascular disorder in clinical practice. Given the difficulty of drug therapy to achieve ideal curative effects, interventional therapy has gradually become the preferred treatment for the disease. This research primarily discusses the short-term efficacy of digital subtraction angiography- (DSA-) guided neurointerventional thrombolysis for acute ischemic cerebrovascular disease (AICVD) and its influence on vascular endothelial function (VEF) and oxidative stress (OS). Methods. All the clinical data of 162 patients diagnosed with AICVD and treated between June 2019 and December 2021 were collected and analyzed retrospectively. They were assigned to two cohorts according to the difference in interventional methods: a conventional group (CG) given recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) therapy and an observation group (OG) intervened by DSA-guided neurointerventional thrombolysis. The two groups were compared with respect to short-term treatment efficacy, the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, cerebral hemodynamics, and VEF and OS indexes. Results. The short-term efficacy was better in OG (93.98%) than in CG (82.28%). After treatment, the NIHSS score decreased in both cohorts with obvious differences within the group at different time points, and the posttreatment NIHSS score was lower in OG as compared to CG. OG had higher
Q
m
and
V
m
while lower
W
v
,
Z
cv
, and
R
v
than CG. Higher endothelial-dependent flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) was observed in OG, as well as lower ankle-brachial index (ABI) and pulse wave velocity (PWV). And the posttreatment MDA was lower while SOD, GSH-Px, and TAC were higher in OG compared with those on CG. All the above differences were of statistical significance (
P
<
0.05
). Conclusions. DSA-guided neurointerventional thrombolysis is highly effective in the treatment of AICVD, which can not only effectively improve patients’ neurological function and cerebral hemodynamics but also mitigate VEF injury and help to alleviate patients’ OS.
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