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1.
Int J Cancer ; 46(3): 445-51, 1990 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2394511

ABSTRACT

We evaluated the utility of the CA 72-4, CEA, CA 125, CA 19-9 and CA 15-3 radioimmunoassays for the detection of tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) in effusions of malignant vs. benign origin. Fluids were obtained from 51 patients with adenocarcinomas, 27 with non-epithelial malignancies, and 68 with benign disorders. The CA 72-4 radioimmunoassay (cut-off value 8.5 U/ml) detected the TAG-72 antigen in 51% of adenocarcinoma patients' effusions, while only 1 of 68 benign specimens had an elevated TAG-72 level. Similarly, CEA levels above 5 ng/ml were found in 55% of the fluids from patients with adenocarcinoma and 3.2% of effusions from patients with benign disease. CA 19-9 (cut-off value 37 U/ml) exhibited a lower degree of sensitivity, with positive values in 23.5% of the effusions due to adenocarcinomas and in 4.5% of the effusions due to benign disease. At a cut-off value of 29 U/ml, CA 15-3 was positive in 49% of fluids from patients with adenocarcinoma and in 3.0% of the benign fluids. The CA 125 RIA failed to show any specificity using the established cut-off value of 35 U/ml, with approximately 80% of all the effusions giving positive results. The specificity of the assay was increased by using a cut-off value of 3000 U/ml, but with a substantial loss in sensitivity (23.5%). Using a combination of the CA 72-4 and CEA RIAs the sensitivity for malignant effusions was increased to 73.5%. No additional improvement in the overall sensitivity was observed when using the CA 72-4 assay in combination with assays for the other markers, except in the case of 1 effusion. We conclude that the CA 72-4 RIA, possibly in combination with other assays such as CEA, may be useful in distinguishing between adenocarcinomatous and benign effusions.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/metabolism , Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate/analysis , Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Antigens, Neoplasm/analysis , Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate/standards , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Carcinoembryonic Antigen/analysis , Glycoproteins/analysis , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Radioimmunoassay
2.
Cancer Res ; 50(16): 4885-90, 1990 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2379152

ABSTRACT

Monoclonal antibody (MAb) B72.3 binds a high molecular weight tumor-associated glycoprotein designated TAG-72. This study reports the isolation and characterization of secreted TAG-72 directly from effusions of ovarian, colorectal, pancreatic, and endometrial carcinoma patients and compares them to TAG-72 derived from the LS-174T colon carcinoma xenograft. The B72.3-reactive antigen, TAG-72, was used as immunogen to produce second generation anti-TAG-72 MAbs. One of these second generation MAbs, CC49, had a higher affinity than that of B72.3 and was utilized as an affinity reagent in a procedure to purify the TAG-72 present in the serous effusions of carcinoma patients. A three-step purification procedure, utilizing heat extraction, CC49 antibody affinity chromatography, and gel filtration chromatography, resulted in 1000- to 4400-fold purifications of the TAG-72 derived from effusions, as analyzed using a double-determinant radioimmunoassay. Radiolabeled TAG-72 from each of the effusions demonstrated similar high molecular weight bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Similar results from the various effusions were also obtained in Western blotting analyses. Analyses of TAG-72 from the different effusions in radioimmunoassay using five different anti-TAG-72 MAbs revealed similar binding patterns. The results of these studies thus indicate that TAG-72 obtained directly from patients with ovarian, colorectal, endometrial, and pancreatic carcinomas and the LS-174T xenograft are highly similar in terms of immunochemical properties and antigenic profile.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Neoplasm/analysis , Colonic Neoplasms/analysis , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Glycoproteins/analysis , Pancreatic Neoplasms/analysis , Rectal Neoplasms/analysis , Animals , Antibodies, Monoclonal , Antigen-Antibody Complex/analysis , Antigens, Neoplasm/isolation & purification , Ascites/immunology , Cell Line , Chromatography, Gel , Endometrium/analysis , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Female , Glycoproteins/isolation & purification , Humans , Mice , Mice, Nude , Neoplasm Transplantation , Radioimmunoassay , Transplantation, Heterologous
4.
Chest ; 98(1): 141-4, 1990 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2361381

ABSTRACT

Whether fluid accumulating in the pleural space is a transudate or an exudate is determined by the widely used criteria of the pleural fluid to serum LDH and protein concentration ratios. Such a distinction is important for limiting the extent of the differential diagnosis of possible causes for this condition. We have found that a pleural fluid to serum total bilirubin ratio can serve the same purpose. The correlation of a bilirubin concentration ratio of 0.6 or more with the presence of an exudate as determined by established criteria is statistically highly significant; and its sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive accuracy, and overall accuracy in relation to etiology and LDH or protein criteria (Light's criteria) are about 90 percent. Hence, the bilirubin criterion is statistically equivalent to the widely accepted LDH and protein criteria.


Subject(s)
Bilirubin/analysis , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Pleural Effusion/etiology , Bilirubin/blood , Diagnosis, Differential , Heart Failure/complications , Humans , Kidney Failure, Chronic/complications , Pleural Effusion/blood , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies
5.
J Surg Res ; 48(6): 534-8, 1990 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2362413

ABSTRACT

Several different cell types play a role in the regulatory mechanisms involved in wound healing. A rat wound model was used to evaluate temporal changes in the cellular infiltrate, histology, and effects of wound fluid (WF) on fibroblast growth and collagen synthesis in vitro. Polyvinyl alcohol sponges were implanted in male Sprague/Dawley rats and harvested after 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, and 15 days. Rat wound fibroblasts were cultured in different media with 10 or 20% WF pooled from five or more rats from each time interval, and then pulsed with [3H]thymidine. Days 1 through 5 WF stimulated proliferation, whereas Days 10 and 15 WF inhibited proliferation. Stimulatory activity was found in the greater than 300 kDa molecular weight fraction; inhibitory activity was in the less than 10 kDa molecular weight fraction. Ten percent WF from both Day 1 and Day 15 sponges exerted a stimulatory effect in incubated fibroblasts on collagen production, measured as protein-bound [3H]hydroxyproline. Fibroblast proliferation and collagen synthesis appeared to be independently regulated functions. Fibroblasts were stimulated by the wound environment to proliferate for about 1 week after injury, at which point further growth was inhibited, while collagen production was maintained.


Subject(s)
Collagen/biosynthesis , Exudates and Transudates/physiology , Fibroblasts/cytology , Wound Healing , Animals , Cell Division , Cells, Cultured , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Male , Molecular Weight , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Thymidine/metabolism
6.
Clin Exp Allergy ; 20(3): 253-9, 1990 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2364306

ABSTRACT

A 'nasal pool' (NP) device, a compressible plastic container with an adapted nozzle, was used to perform a continuous 10-min nasal provocation and lavage. This novel technique brings known concentrations of agents into contact with a large and defined area of the nasal mucosal surface for extended periods of time. Simultaneously, the surface exudations/secretions of the same nasal mucosa are effectively sampled by the NP fluid. A concentration-response study of histamine (80, 400 and 2000 micrograms/ml) was performed in 12 normal subjects on three different occasions. Exudation of plasma albumin into the lavage fluid was measured to quantitate the histamine-induced airway inflammation. The effect of the dwell time on exudation was examined using histamine (400 micrograms/ml) instilled in the nasal cavity for time periods from 10 sec to 10 min. The time course of histamine-induced plasma exudation response was studied by exposing the mucosa to histamine (400 micrograms/ml) for 12 min, with the NP renewed every minute. Allergen-provocations were performed in subjects with hay fever and TAME-esterase activity in the returned lavage fluid was determined to indicate the degree of response. Histamine produced a concentration-dependent increase in albumin levels in the NP fluid; 123.3 +/- 25.6, 213.8 +/- 19.7 and 430.2 +/- 32.0 micrograms/ml (mean +/- s.e.m.), respectively. The time-course study demonstrated that plasma exudation into the lumen occurred promptly and that the exudation response reached a maximum after exposure to histamine for 6-10 min. The dwell-time experiments supported this finding. After 10 min the exudation appeared to decline despite the continued presence of histamine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Histamine/immunology , Nasal Mucosa , Nasal Provocation Tests/instrumentation , Adolescent , Adult , Albumins/analysis , Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Exudates and Transudates/immunology , Histamine/administration & dosage , Humans , Male , Nasal Mucosa/drug effects , Nasal Mucosa/metabolism , Nasal Provocation Tests/methods , Rhinitis, Allergic, Seasonal/immunology , Therapeutic Irrigation/instrumentation , Therapeutic Irrigation/methods , Time Factors , Tosylarginine Methyl Ester/immunology
7.
Rev Fr Gynecol Obstet ; 85(5): 329-35, 1990 May.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2165275

ABSTRACT

The authors report 46 cases of nipple discharge without any palpable lesion. The diagnostic is made, most of the time, by 3-views bilateral mammograms. The place of other examinations (ultrasonography, galactography) is reported. The cytology of the discharge, as well as its macroscopic appearance (bloody, serous or greenish), determine the surgical indications. Quadrantectomy centered around the discharging duct, is the procedure of choice in this disease, at the interface between diagnostic and treatment, in fact, if benign tumors (papillomas) or non tumoral diseases (fibrocystic mastopathy and duct ectasia) predominate, invasive or in-situ malignant lesions represent 13 p. cent of these 46 discharges, justifying the significance of this clinical sign.


Subject(s)
Breast/pathology , Nipples/pathology , Aged , Breast Diseases/diagnosis , Breast Neoplasms/diagnosis , Carcinoma in Situ/diagnosis , Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating/diagnosis , Diagnosis, Differential , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Female , Fibrocystic Breast Disease/diagnosis , Humans , Mammography , Middle Aged , Milk, Human/analysis , Papilloma/diagnosis
8.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 70(4): 1030-4, 1990 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2318933

ABSTRACT

Breast cyst fluid (BCF) aspirated from 12 women with fibrocystic disease of the breast and sera obtained simultaneously were analyzed for bile acids. Analysis was performed by gas-liquid chromatography of the acetoxy methyl esters of the bile acids prepared after alkaline hydrolysis of the bile salts. An internal standard served to correct for methodological losses. Low levels of bile acids were found in serum samples, precluding overt hepatobiliary complications. Deoxycholic acid (17-160 mumol/L), chenodeoxycholic acid (18-305 mumol/L), and cholic acid (3-119 mumol/L) were detected in 11 of 12 samples of BCF. In 2 cases, chosen at random, the identities of the bile acids were verified by mass spectrometry. Lithocholic acid (9-23 mumol/L), a reported cocarcinogen, was detected in 6 of the 12 samples of BCF. This is the first report of the presence of lithocholic acid in BCF with confirmation by Mass spectrometry. There was no correlation between the levels of individual bile acids and those of potassium ion, Na+/K+, estriol-3-sulfate, or 16 alpha-hydroxyandrogen sulfates that had been quantified previously in these samples. There was borderline correlation between concentrations of total bile acids and K+ (P less than 0.06) and Na+/K+ (P less than 0.07). Yet to be elucidated are the mechanism of accumulation of bile acids in BCF and whether levels of particular bile acids in BCF may serve to identify that small subset of women with fibrocystic disease at risk for developing breast cancer.


Subject(s)
Bile Acids and Salts/analysis , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Fibrocystic Breast Disease/metabolism , Lithocholic Acid/analysis , Adult , Androgens/analysis , Bile Acids and Salts/blood , Electrolytes/analysis , Estriol/analysis , Female , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Middle Aged
9.
Hepatology ; 11(4): 557-65, 1990 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1970324

ABSTRACT

Hepatic cysts are a frequent manifestation of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, but little is known about their functional characteristics. The goals of our study were to define the composition of hepatic cyst fluid and to determine whether hepatic cysts secrete in response to intravenously administered secretin. We percutaneously punctured five hepatic cysts and one proximal renal cyst from six subjects with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease and one solitary hepatic cyst from a subject without autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. Most fluids had an electrolyte composition similar to serum. Fluid from all hepatic cysts had glutamyltranspeptidase concentrations above those found in serum [( cyst]/[serum] = 4.93 +/- 5.92), contained secretory component (the epithelial receptor for polymeric IgA) and had glucose concentrations less than 15 mg/dl. Fluid from both hepatic and renal cysts of subjects with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, but not from the subject with the solitary hepatic cyst, demonstrated extensive changes in the electrophoretic mobility of several serum proteins. Initial intracystic pressures ranged from 16 to 40 cm H2O, were reduced 57% to 97% after aspiration of a portion of cyst fluid and were held constant during the secretion study. Within 8 min of the intravenous administration of secretin, secretion of fluid increased in two of three hepatic cysts and in the renal cyst. The electrolyte composition of cyst fluids was not altered by secretin. These data suggest that hepatic cystic epithelium has functional characteristics of biliary epithelium and that secretion by both hepatic and renal cysts may be hormonally regulated.


Subject(s)
Bile Ducts/physiology , Cysts/physiopathology , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Liver Diseases/physiopathology , Secretin , Aged , Cysts/analysis , Cysts/metabolism , Epithelium/physiology , Epithelium/physiopathology , Exudates and Transudates/metabolism , Female , Humans , Immunoglobulin A, Secretory/analysis , Liver Diseases/metabolism , Male , Middle Aged , Polycystic Kidney Diseases/analysis , Polycystic Kidney Diseases/genetics , Polycystic Kidney Diseases/metabolism , Proteins/analysis , gamma-Glutamyltransferase/analysis
11.
Vestn Khir Im I I Grek ; 144(2): 140-2, 1990 Feb.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2165666

ABSTRACT

An analysis of results of contrast mammography in 42 women having spontaneous, persistent and unilateral discharge from the nipple of the breast of serous, serous-hemorrhagic and hemorrhagic character was made. The cause of the discharge was found to be intraductal papillomas and cystadenopapillomas in 55% of the cases, breast cancer--in 2% which were not diagnosed by noncontrast mammography.


Subject(s)
Breast Diseases/diagnosis , Breast Neoplasms/diagnosis , Breast/metabolism , Exudates and Transudates/metabolism , Nipples/metabolism , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Diagnosis, Differential , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Female , Humans , Mammography , Nipples/diagnostic imaging , Palpation
12.
Adv Neurol ; 52: 11-9, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2396507

ABSTRACT

The role of hydrostatic pressure and osmotic pressure gradient in the development of vasogenic brain edema induced by cold lesion made in the parietal cortex was studied in cats under ketamine anesthesia and blood pressure monitoring. The animals were divided into a hypertensive group and a normotensive group and were kept alive for 6 hr. The brain was removed and cut coronally at the lesion for tissue sampling from various areas of edematous white matter to measure both the SG and the amount of extravasated serum albumin in the same samples. Our result showed that the edema confined in the area containing extravasated serum albumin and the increase of water content correlated linearly with the amount of extravasated serum albumin both in the normotensive group and hypertensive group. However, the slope of the regression line indicated albumin content in the edema fluid was significantly different between the two groups. The slope became lower as the MABP during the experiment became higher, indicating that protein concentration in the edema fluid became lower when hypertension sustained. Thus, both hydrostatic and osmotic pressure gradient regulate the extravascular accumulation of edema fluid in the cold lesion edema.


Subject(s)
Brain Edema/etiology , Brain Injuries/complications , Cold Temperature/adverse effects , Albumins/analysis , Animals , Blood Glucose/analysis , Blood Pressure , Brain Chemistry , Brain Edema/blood , Brain Edema/physiopathology , Cats , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Female , Hematocrit , Hydrostatic Pressure , Male , Osmotic Pressure , Potassium/blood , Sodium/blood
13.
Adv Neurol ; 52: 449-58, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2396538

ABSTRACT

Cat brain tumors were produced by stereotactical xenotransplantation of rat glioma clone F98 into the internal capsule of the left hemisphere. Two to four weeks after implantation, the tissue content of water, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, serum albumin, serum immunoglobulin, and hemoglobin was measured in samples taken from the tumor, from peritumoral white and gray matter, and from homotopic regions of the opposite hemisphere. Extravasated serum protein content was determined by subtracting intravascular from total tissue protein, using the hemoglobin content as a marker of blood volume. The development of brain tumors was accompanied by severe vasogenic brain edema, which was clearly confined to the ipsilateral white matter. The increase of water was paralleled by an increase of sodium, calcium, and serum proteins. Potassium and magnesium content remained constant. The calculated sodium and calcium content of edema fluid approximated that of blood serum. The content of blood proteins was about 50% lower, but the ratio of albumin/immunoglobulin was the same as in blood. It is concluded that peritumoral edema is a combination of plasma ultrafiltrate and whole plasma extravasation with different modes of formation. Implications for the pathophysiology and therapy of peritumoral edema are discussed.


Subject(s)
Brain Chemistry , Brain Edema/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/complications , Glioma/complications , Animals , Blood Proteins/analysis , Body Water/analysis , Brain Edema/etiology , Brain Edema/pathology , Brain Neoplasms/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Cats , Electrolytes/analysis , Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Glioma/metabolism , Glioma/pathology , Immunoglobulins/analysis , Neoplasm Transplantation , Rats , Transplantation, Heterologous
16.
Circ Res ; 66(1): 163-75, 1990 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2295137

ABSTRACT

In response to various stimuli, the pericardium produces prostaglandins that might play a role in neural regulation of cardiac electrophysiological properties by modulating epicardial nerve effects. We determined the effects of various epicardial superfusates on efferent cardiac responses, induced by bilateral efferent ansae subclaviae (SS) and cervical vagal (VS) stimulation, and afferent cardiac reflexes elicited by intracoronary injections of bradykinin (25 micrograms) and nicotine (50 micrograms). Pericardial instillation of arachidonic acid in normal Tyrode's solution (3 micrograms/ml) increased the concentration of pericardial prostacyclin (PGI2), measured by radioimmunoassay as the stable metabolite 6-keto-PGF1 alpha, and of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Arachidonic acid superfusion reduced SS-induced shortening of sinus cycle length (SCL), atrio-His interval (AH), and effective refractory period (ERP) of the right and left ventricular myocardium and prevented intra-aortic angiotensin II (30 ng/kg/min) from augmenting SS effects on these variables. Pericardial arachidonic acid plus indomethacin (1 microgram/ml) eliminated the prostaglandin increase and restored the responses of SCL, AH, and ERP to SS and to angiotensin II infusion. Pericardial PGE2 (30 or 50 ng/ml) or PGI2 (50 ng/ml) reversibly suppressed SS-induced shortening of SCL and ERP. Pericardial arachidonic acid or PGI2, however, did not blunt the shortening of ERP induced by intravenous infusion of norepinephrine. Pericardial arachidonic acid did not affect VS-induced lengthening of ERP or the duration of sinus arrest, or arterial blood pressure and heart rate responses to bradykinin or nicotine. We conclude that an increase in the concentration of prostaglandins in the pericardial fluid inhibits efferent sympathetic nerve effects on cardiac electrophysiological variables and antagonizes the facilitatory action of angiotensin II on efferent sympathetic stimulation by acting at presynaptic sites. Increased concentration of pericardial prostaglandins in response to various stimuli may constitute a physiological negative-feedback control mechanism that regulates efferent cardiac sympathetic stimulation.


Subject(s)
Exudates and Transudates/analysis , Heart/innervation , Pericardium/physiology , Prostaglandins/physiology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology , Animals , Bradykinin/pharmacology , Dogs , Electric Stimulation , Electrophysiology , Female , Heart/physiology , Heart Conduction System/physiology , Male , Nicotine/pharmacology , Prostaglandins/analysis , Radioimmunoassay , Stimulation, Chemical
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