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1.
Surg Radiol Anat ; 26(4): 338-43, 2004 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15138715

ABSTRACT

The accessory midline thyroids are ascribed to an arrest of migration of the median thyroid anlage, while the lateral ectopic thyroids have induced a hypothesis of the presence of lateral thyroid anlage. We report the case of a 67-year-old man who presented with dyspnea and dysphagia of 1 year's duration. The clinical examination and radiological investigations (CT and MRI) showed a solid heterogeneous mass in the right parapharyngeal space. The fine needle aspiration biopsy was inconsistent. The mass (3x2.5x3.5 cm) was excised via a transoral approach. It was capsulated with an elastic consistency and showed a nodular appearance on the cut surface. Histological examination revealed thyroid tissue with the characteristics of colloid goiter. The postoperative (99m)Tc-pertechnetate scan showed the normal thyroid gland located in the usual pretracheal site. The absence of malignancy, at histology and immunohistochemistry, allows a metastatic nature of the mass to be ruled out, and accounts for a supernumerary thyroid. The occurrence of a parapharyngeal thyroid, although extremely rare, is worth bearing in mind as a possible ectopic location. This case also supports the hypothesized role of the lateral thyroid anlage in man deriving from the ultimo-branchial body in the morphogenesis of the lateral lobe of the thyroid gland.


Subject(s)
Choristoma , Pharynx , Thyroid Gland , Aged , Humans , Male
2.
Cells Tissues Organs ; 173(1): 54-63, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12566627

ABSTRACT

Sarcoglycans are a subcomplex of transmembrane proteins which are part of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex. They are expressed in the skeletal, cardiac and smooth muscle. Although numerous studies have been conducted on the sarcoglycan subcomplex in skeletal and cardiac muscle, the manner of the distribution and localization of these proteins along the nonjunctional sarcolemma is not clear. We therefore carried out an indirect immunofluorescence study on surgical biopsies of normal human skeletal muscle and of healthy human atrial myocardium biopsies of patients affected by valvulopathy. Our results indicate that, in skeletal muscle, sarcoglycans have a costameric distribution and all colocalize with each other. Only in a few cases did the alpha-sarcoglycan not colocalize with other sarcoglycans. In addition, these glycoproteins can be localized in different fibers either in the regions of the sarcolemma over band I or band A. In cardiac muscle, our results show a costameric distribution of all proteins examined and, unlike in skeletal muscle, they show a constant colocalization of all sarcoglycans with each other, along with a consistent localization of these proteins in the region of the sarcolemma over band I. In our opinion, this situation seems to confirm the hypothesis of a correlation between the region of the sarcolemma occupied by costameric proteins and the metabolic type, fast or slow, of the muscular fibers. These data, besides opening a new line of research in understanding interactions between the sarcoglycans and other transmembrane proteins, could also be extended to skeletal and cardiac muscles affected by neuromuscular and cardiovascular pathologies to understand possible structural alterations.


Subject(s)
Dystrophin/metabolism , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Myocardium/metabolism , Biopsy , Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect , Heart Atria/cytology , Heart Atria/metabolism , Humans , Microscopy, Confocal , Muscle, Skeletal/cytology , Myocardium/cytology
3.
Br J Nutr ; 76(6): 869-80, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9014655

ABSTRACT

The effects of olive oil and rapeseed oil, two different high-oleic-acid oils, on plasma LDL and hepatic cholesterol metabolism were compared in guinea-pigs. Animals were fed on semipurified diet containing 150 g fat/kg as either olive oil (OL), rapeseed oil plus 100 g palm oil/kg (C-P) or olive oil plus 350 g safflowerseed oil/kg (OL-S). Olive oil was enriched with safflowerseed oil (OL-S diet) to increase linoleic acid and to decrease palmitic acid concentrations, in order to evaluate whether differences in plasma LDL concentrations were due to intrinsic effects of the specific oil (rapeseed or olive oil) or to differences in the content of specific fatty acids. No differences due to dietary fat source were found in plasma total and HDL-cholesterol levels or in LDL composition. Plasma LDL-cholesterol levels were lower on the C-P diet than the OL diet (P < 0.05) while plasma LDL-cholesterol levels in animals fed on the OL-S diet were not significantly different from either dietary group (P > 0.05). The number of hepatic apo B/E (LDL) receptors was on average 25% higher in animals fed on the C-P diet compared with those fed on diets containing olive oil. Likewise, cardiac muscle lipoprotein lipase (EC 3.1.1.34) activity was significantly higher in the C-P group than in the OL and OL-S dietary groups. Dietary fat source had no effect on hepatic cholesterol levels or 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl (HMG) CoA reductase (EC 1.1.1.34) activity. The results indicate that olive oil and rapeseed oil, both rich sources of monounsaturated fatty acids, differ in their effect on LDL metabolism in the guinea-pig.


Subject(s)
Lipoproteins, LDL/blood , Liver/metabolism , Plant Oils/administration & dosage , Animals , Cholesterol/metabolism , Cholesterol, LDL/blood , Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated , Guinea Pigs , Lipoprotein Lipase/metabolism , Male , Myocardium/enzymology , Olive Oil , Rapeseed Oil
4.
Ital J Anat Embryol ; 100 Suppl 1: 309-16, 1995.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11322305

ABSTRACT

This study reports some morphological characteristics of human placenta that play an important physiological role in normal pregnancies. The structures were the spiral arteries, the extracellular matrix and the MHC-antigens bearing cells. We studied these important tissue compartments in 80 placentas from normal and abnormal pregnancies (affected by in utero growth-retardation), where we could hypothesize an altered pattern of the same structures. Placental specimens were evaluated using histochemistry and immunohistochemical methods, like echo-doppler and echography. Our data show uterine and spiral arteries as markedly changing during pregnancy in normal women, but surely involved in some different morphological alterations in the pathological groups. The extracellular matrix compartment is strictly related with the vascular one, both under a physiological point of view (artery resistance and sometimes blood flow inversion) and under a non-cellular component pattern. Normal specimens are rich in sialomucins, solfomucins and glycoproteins. Collagen bundles are mainly of fetal type III, by also adult type I is present at the physiological end of pregnancy. In placentas with blood supply alteration, morphological studies suggest an early aging of the extracellular matrix (with prevalence of adult type I collagen in perivascular muffs). These changes could make more difficult all the exchanges from the blood to the tissues. The immunocompetent cell population is normally well represented in placental tissue: these cells are dentritic-shaped and lie in the perivascular spaces and in the placental and villous stroma. In the altered placentas examined, we were able to identify HLA-DR+ cells that exhibit Langerhans cell markers and are strongly suggestive of an alteration of the normal immunitary relationship between fetal antigens and mother T-cell populations.


Subject(s)
Blood Vessels/cytology , Placenta/blood supply , Placenta/cytology , Blood Vessels/metabolism , Dendritic Cells/cytology , Dendritic Cells/metabolism , Female , HLA-DR Antigens/metabolism , Humans , Placenta/metabolism , Pregnancy
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