Anorectal melanoma is a rare disorder. There have only been a few cases reported and there is no consensus of treatment. We report a case of 50-year-old Caucasian man presenting intermittent prolapse of an anorectal mass during 6 months with occasional bleeding. Biopsies came up with the diagnosis of malignant melanoma. No distant metastases were found. He underwent an abdominoperineal resection due to internal sphincter invasion. A second tumour was diagnosed in final histologic examination: a dysplastic rectal polyp invaded by the melanoma (collision tumour). At 12 months of follow up he presented loco-regional recurrence (a single pelvic lymph node) and hepatic metastases. He was included in a study protocol comparing new medical treatments (nivolumab versus ipilimumab or both).
Plasma samples from 21 patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung were screened for pancreatic polypeptide, somatostatin, motilin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. One patient had severe impairment of both renal and liver function. In the 20 remaining subjects vasoactive intestinal polypeptide concentrations were normal, and only two patients had increased concentrations of somatostatin. Increases in pancreatic polypeptide were detected more commonly (7/20), but these may have been non-specific age related increases. The major finding was high concentrations of motilin (> 496 pg/ml) in 17 of 20 patients. Plasma motilin was subsequently assayed in 16 more patients with lung cancer, including 10 patients with non-small cell carcinoma of the lung. At concentrations over 900 pg/ml plasma motilin appears to be a tumour marker for small cell carcinoma of the lung with acceptable sensitivity (59%) and specificity (78%). The origin of increased plasma motilin in small cell carcinoma of the lung was investigated. Bombesin (gastrin releasing peptide), a peptide known to stimulate the release of motilin in man, was, as in previous studies, detected in tumour but not in plasma, except in one patient out of 21. Immunohistochemical studies failed to detect motilin antigen in biopsy samples. Motilin tumour content was found to be low in tumour tissue from three patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung who had appreciable hypermotilinaemia and from three patients with non-small cell carcinoma of the lung who had either normal or slightly raised plasma motilin concentrations. The stimulus to motilin secretion in patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung remains unclear.
The article examines the role of agricultural GDP growth in alleviating rural poverty in LDCs. Cross-sectional regression analysis indicates that GDP growth by itself takes a very long time to reduce poverty significantly. It suggests that decreases in land concentration could have a more immediate impact on reducing rural poverty; the budgetary and other costs of implementing such changes are not, however, considered. The preferred approach is a combination of equitable growth and redistributive measures.
Zinc deficiency is well known to alter immunity. We report the case of a 18-yr-old female with relapsing Crohn's disease who experienced acrodermatitis enteropathica due to zinc deficiency during total parenteral nutrition (TPN). Blood lymphocytes have been studied by flow cytometry: before zinc treatment an important decrease of T-helper lymphocytes with high level of OKM-5+ lymphocytes had been observed. Zinc-supplemented diet induced within a few days, a rise of T-helper lymphocytes and a proportional reduction of OKM5+ cells. Increased values of high metabolism surface marker (OKT-9) were also observed, as well as cytoplasmic modifications. The authors suggest that lymphocyte surface markers could be useful to monitor TPN in patients at high risk for zinc deficiency.
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