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Bladder Wall (bladder + wall)
Selected AbstractsBladder wall grafting in rats using salt-modified and collagen-coated polycaprolactone scaffolds: Preliminary reportINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 10 2007Dah-Shyong Yu Aim: A rat model was used for the evaluation of collagen-coated and salt-modified polycaprolactone (PCL) scaffolds for bladder grafting after hemicystectomy. Methods: SD rats underwent partial cystectomy and cystoplasty with collagen-coated and salt-modified polycaprolactone scaffolds. The grafts of the regenerated bladder wall were harvested at different intervals and tissue regeneration was evaluated microscopically. Anatomic and functional characters were evaluated by cystography and urodynamics. Results: At harvesting, after 1 and 2 months, we found good preservation of the bladder shape and volume in all 16 rats receiving PCL cystorrhaphy. No stone formation was observed. Good epithelialization and ingrowth of smooth muscle cells were seen after 2 months grafting. Collagen-coated PCL scaffolds showed considerable encrustation, which appeared to be absorbed and disappear with time. The cystographic and urodynamic examinations revealed intact contour and a well-accommodated bladder with reservoir volume and contractility. Conclusions: In the rat model, we have successfully demonstrated the applicability of collagen coated and salt-modified PCL in reconstruction of the partial cystectomized bladder. [source] Bladder wall grafting in rats using salt-modified and collagen-coated polycaprolactone scaffolds: Preliminary reportINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 10 2007Akihiro Kanematsu No abstract is available for this article. [source] Tissue Integration of Polyacrylamide Hydrogel: An Experimental Study of Periurethral, Perivesical, and Mammary Gland Tissue in the PigDERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 2008DMSC, LISE H. CHRISTENSEN MD BACKGROUND Polyacrylamide hydrogel (PAAG) is a nondegradable water-based polymer with high viscoelasticity. The gel is used as a tissue filler, the only risk being prolonged infection with anaerobic, contaminating microorganisms if not treated early with broad-spectrum antibiotics. OBJECTIVE With silicone gel as reference, PAAG tissue integration and migration was studied in a longitudinal study of the pig. MATERIALS AND METHODS Forty-one pigs were used. PAAG and silicone gel were injected into mammary tissue, and PAAG was injected into urethral or bladder wall or the anal canal. Tissues and regional lymph nodes were examined at 1, 1 1/2, 3, 3 1/2, 6, 12, and 14 months, and other lymph nodes and organs were examined at 1, 6, 12, and 14 months. RESULTS PAAG was invaded by macrophages and giant cells that were gradually replaced by a network of fibrous tissue. Silicone gel was seen inside these cells or as large vacuoles, surrounded by a fibrous capsule. Regional lymph nodes contained PAAG only at 1 1/2 months and silicone gel at 12 months. CONCLUSION PAAG is a stable, viscoelastic bulking agent, which unlike silicone gel is slowly integrated within its host tissue via a thin fibrous network. Long-term risk of fibrosis and migration is minimal. [source] High levels of serum prostate-specific antigen due to PSA producing follicular non-Hodgkin's lymphomaEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, Issue 2 2007Jan Jelrik Oosterheert Abstract Objective:, Both carcinoma of the prostate and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma are common in elderly patients. Measurement of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a frequently used tool to diagnose and monitor prostate carcinoma and is generally specific for diseases of the prostate. Case:, We describe a 68-yr-old patient with voiding difficulties and high PSA levels, but without inflammatory or malignant changes upon multiple transrectal ultrasound guided prostate biopsies. Digital rectal examination was normal. Laboratory showed a strongly elevated PSA level (62 ,g/L, Immulight 2000®; DPC, USA). A CT-scan showed a retroperitoneal process with mass in the right pelvis and infiltration of the bladder wall, suggestive for metastatic prostate carcinoma. Surgical excision of an axillary lymph node set the diagnosis at a stage IV follicular lymphoma, Berard grade I to II in which the majority of neoplastic cells expressed PSA. After lymphoma-specific treatment, there was a positron emission tomography (PET) confirmed complete remission with normal PSA levels (6 ,g/L), which still persists. Conclusion:, Although rare, high PSA levels can be due to the presence of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Such a diagnosis should be considered when patients present with lymphadenopathy other than regional prostatic lymphadenopathy. [source] Isolation of a Carnobacterium maltaromaticum- like bacterium from systemically infected lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis)FEMS MICROBIOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 1 2008Thomas P. Loch Abstract Herein we report on the first isolation of a Carnobacterium maltaromaticum -like bacterium from kidneys and swim bladders of lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) caught from Lakes Michigan and Huron, Michigan. Isolates were Gram-positive, nonmotile, facultatively anaerobic, asporogenous rods that did not produce catalase, cytochrome oxidase, or H2S, and did not grow on acetate agar. Except for carbohydrate fermentation, many phenotypic characteristics of lake whitefish isolates coincided with those of C. maltaromaticum, the causative agent of pseudokidney disease. Partial sequencing of 16S and 23S rRNA genes, as well as the piscicolin 126 precursor gene, yielded 97% and 98% nucleotide matches with C. maltaromaticum, respectively (accession numbers EU546836 and EU546837; EU643471). Phylogenetic analyses showed that lake whitefish isolates of this study are highly related, yet not fully identical to C. maltaromaticum. The presence of the C. maltaromaticum -like bacterium was associated with splenomegaly, renal and splenic congestion, and thickening of the swim bladder wall with accumulation of a mucoid exudate. Examination of stained tissue sections revealed renal and splenic congestion, vacuolation and bile stasis within the liver, and hyperplasia within the epithelial lining of the swim bladder. The concurrent presence of pathological changes and the C. maltaromaticum -like bacteria suggests that this bacterium is pathogenic to lake whitefish. [source] Bladder wall grafting in rats using salt-modified and collagen-coated polycaprolactone scaffolds: Preliminary reportINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 10 2007Dah-Shyong Yu Aim: A rat model was used for the evaluation of collagen-coated and salt-modified polycaprolactone (PCL) scaffolds for bladder grafting after hemicystectomy. Methods: SD rats underwent partial cystectomy and cystoplasty with collagen-coated and salt-modified polycaprolactone scaffolds. The grafts of the regenerated bladder wall were harvested at different intervals and tissue regeneration was evaluated microscopically. Anatomic and functional characters were evaluated by cystography and urodynamics. Results: At harvesting, after 1 and 2 months, we found good preservation of the bladder shape and volume in all 16 rats receiving PCL cystorrhaphy. No stone formation was observed. Good epithelialization and ingrowth of smooth muscle cells were seen after 2 months grafting. Collagen-coated PCL scaffolds showed considerable encrustation, which appeared to be absorbed and disappear with time. The cystographic and urodynamic examinations revealed intact contour and a well-accommodated bladder with reservoir volume and contractility. Conclusions: In the rat model, we have successfully demonstrated the applicability of collagen coated and salt-modified PCL in reconstruction of the partial cystectomized bladder. [source] Urological complications in 980 consecutive patients with renal transplantationINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 10 2006HAMID R DAVARI Aim: To present the urological complications of renal transplantations performed in the last 14 years at one center and to briefly explain a modified method of Lich,Gregoir ureteroneocystostomy. Methods: The data of 980 patients receiving kidney transplants at the authors' institution from April 1991 to February 2004 were reviewed in a retrospective prospective study. In particular, surgical techniques and urological complications were noted. Results: A total of 980 patients had received kidney transplantation. Extravesical ureteroneocystostomy (Lich,Gregoir method) was used in the first 480 patients (group A). In the subsequent 500 patients, the authors' modified method of extravesical ureteroneocystostomy, using single layer anastomosis and small feeding tubes as stent, was used (group B). Overall urological complication rate was 2.8% (28 patients), including leakage (13 patients, 1.3%), stenosis (seven, 0.7%), obstruction (one, 0.1%), distal ureter necrosis (four, 0.4%), pelvocalyceal fistula (two, 0.2%) and implantation of ureter into the peritoneum (one, 0.1%). Urological complications were significantly more common in group A compared to group B (16, 3.3% and 9, 1.8%, respectively; P < 0.05). Conclusions: Preserving the adventitia, fat and blood supply of the ureter by delicate dissection of the ureter during donor nephrectomy, short ureters, and fixation of the adventitia, fat and blood supply of the ureter to the bladder wall, to prevent kinking or twisting, are important factors in decreasing urological complications. Additionally, the authors' method of ureteroneocystostomy is also effective in decreasing the incidence of ureteric complications. [source] Histology of the fetal prune belly syndrome with reference to the efficacy of prenatal decompressionINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 5 2000Kenji Shimada Abstract Background: Deficient abdominal musculature, complex abnormalities of urinary tracts and bilateral abdominal cryptorchidism represent the basic characteristics of prune belly syndrome (PBS). Although prenatal diagnosis of PBS is rarely made, because of the wide variety of ultrasonographic images, reported cases have gradually increased. Once a fetus suspected of having PBS is found, it is sometimes difficult for the pediatric urologists to decide how to treat them. The histology of the kidney and urinary tracts in fetuses with PBS was reviewed in order to give suggestions on the management of prenatal cases. Methods: Autopsy records of nine fetuses (5 males, 2 females and 2 undetermined) with characteristically distended and deficient abdominal wall were reviewed. Gestational age (GA) at detection ranged from 12 to 25 weeks and at delivery from 13 to 32 weeks. Results: Renal histology in two fetuses showed earlier than normal disappearance of cortical nephrogenic zone replaced by cortical cysts and dysplastic structures. The nephrogenic zone was retained in five fetuses which were younger than GA 20 weeks. While the number of glomeruli along the medullary ray was normal for the age in three fetuses younger than GA 20 weeks, it was decreased in all others. Bladder histology was variable showing both increased musculature and defective or dysplastic muscles. There was a tendency for connective tissues in the bladder wall to increase in proportion to GA, The ureter revealed scarcity of muscle bundles among dense connective tissue. The urethra was atretic in eight fetuses. Conclusion: The clinical implication from the renal histology is that decompression of the urinary tract should be done before GA 20 weeks. However, the early fetal treatment appears to have no effect on the urodynamics in this disorder with deficient musculature. [source] A novel immunotherapy for superficial bladder cancer by intravesical immobilization of GM-CSFJOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE, Issue 6b 2010Zhiming Hu Abstract In situ gene therapy with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) was demonstrated to successfully inhibit tumour cell growth in a mouse orthotopic bladder cancer model, but suffered from several disadvantages, such as limited efficiency for gene delivery, low expression efficiency of the transgene and the safety concern resulting from viral vector. In order to address the limits, a novel immunotherapy was developed attentively through immobilization of streptavidin-tagged bioactive GM-CSF on the biotinylated mucosal surface of bladder wall on the basis of both the unique property of streptavidin (SA) to bind rapidly and almost irreversibly to any biotin-linked molecule and the outstanding ability of biotin to be incorporated easily into the proteins on the cell surface. The mouse orthotopic model of MB49 bladder cancer was used to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of the novel immunotherapy performed twice a week for 3 weeks. Briefly, 1 day after intravesical implantation of 1 × 106 MB49 tumour cells in C57BL/6 mouse, 100 ,l of 1 mg/ml NHS-PEO4-biotin was instilled and allowed to incubate in the bladder for 30 min., followed by intravesical instillation of 100 ,l of 0.15 mg/ml SA-GM-CSF bifunctional fusion protein and incubation for 1 hr. SA-GM-CSF fusion protein was shown to be immobilized efficiently and durably on the biotinylated mucosal surface of bladder wall. The bladder cancer incidence was dramatically decreased from 100% in the control group to 37.5% in the SA-GM-CSF group. Importantly, 70% of the SA-GM-CSF-cured mice were protected against a second intravesical wild-type MB49 tumour challenge, indicating that an effective anti-tumour immunity was generated against MB49 bladder cancer. Thus, the novel immunotherapy may be an attractive therapeutic alternative and should be evaluated in bladder cancer patients. [source] Imaging of adenomyomatosis of the gall bladderJOURNAL OF MEDICAL IMAGING AND RADIATION ONCOLOGY, Issue 2 2008H Stunell Summary Adenomyomatosis is a relatively common abnormality of the gall bladder, with a reported incidence of between 2.8 and 5%. Although mainly confined to the adult study group, a number of cases have been reported in the paediatric study group. It is characterized pathologically by excessive proliferation of the surface epithelium and hypertrophy of the muscularis propria of the gall bladder wall, with invagination of the mucosa into the thickened muscularis forming the so-called ,Rokitansky,Aschoff' sinuses. The condition is usually asymptomatic and is often diagnosed as an incidental finding on abdominal imaging. The radiological diagnosis is largely dependent on the visualization of the characteristic Rokitansky,Aschoff sinuses. As the condition is usually asymptomatic, the importance of making a correct diagnosis is to prevent misinterpretation of other gall bladder conditions such as gall bladder cancer, leading to incorrect treatment. In the past, oral cholecystography was the main imaging method used to make this diagnosis. In most institutions, oral cholecystography is no longer carried out, and the diagnosis is now more commonly seen on cross-sectional imaging. In this review article, we describe the manifestations of adenomyomatosis on the various imaging methods, with an emphasis on more modern techniques such as magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography. A brief section on oral cholecystography to aid readers familiar with this technique in understanding the comparable imaging features on more modern imaging techniques is included. [source] Sensor Mechanism and Afferent Signal Transduction of the Urinary Bladder: Special Focus on transient receptor potential Ion ChannelsLUTS, Issue 2 2010Masayuki TAKEDA In the urine storage phase, mechanical stretch stimulates bladder afferents. These urinary bladder afferent sensory nerves consist of small diameter A, - and C-fibers running in the hypogastic and pelvic nerves. Neuroanatomical studies have revealed a complex neuronal network within the bladder wall. The exact mechanisms that underline mechano-sensory transduction in bladder afferent terminals remain ambiguous; however, a wide range of ion channels (e.g. TTX-resistant Na+ channels, Kv channels and hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotidegated cation channels, degenerin/epithelial Na+ channel), and receptors (e.g. TRPV1, TRPM8, TRPA1, P2X2/3, etc.) have been identified at bladder afferent terminals and have implicated in the generation and modulation of afferent signals, which are elcited by a wide range of bladder stimulations including physiological bladder filling, noxious distension, cold, chemical irritation and inflammation. The mammalian transient receptor potential (TRP) family consists of 28 channels that can be subdivided into six different classes: TRPV (Vanilloid), TRPC (Canonical), TRPM (Melastatin), TRPP (Polycystin), TRPML (Mucolipin), and TRPA (Ankyrin). TRP channels are activated by a diversity of physical (voltage, heat, cold, mechanical stress) or chemical (pH, osmolality) stimuli and by binding of specific ligands, enabling them to act as multifunctional sensors at the cellular level. TRPV1, TRPV2, TRPV4, TRPM8, and TRPA1 have been described in different parts of the urogenital tract. Although only TRPV1 among TRPs has been extensively studied so far, more evidence is slowly accumulating about the role of other TRP channels, ion channels, and receptors in the pathophysiology of the urogenital tract, and may provide a new strategy for the treatment of bladder dysfunction. [source] Evaluating the In Vitro and In Vivo Efficacy of Nano-Structured Polymers for Bladder Tissue Replacement ApplicationsMACROMOLECULAR BIOSCIENCE, Issue 5 2007Megan Pattison Abstract Bladder cancers requiring radical cystectomy, along with congenital and acquired disorders which result in obstruction of the bladder, necessitate surgical measures (including augmentation); such diagnoses bring a clinical need for effective bladder replacement implant designs. Many recent approaches for the design of soft tissue replacement materials have relied on the use of synthetic polymeric substances; unfortunately, the optimal soft tissue implant material is yet to be found. This may, in part, be because current polymeric formulations fail to sufficiently biomimic the neighboring bladder tissue. This study took a brand new approach in designing the next generation of tissue-engineered bladder constructs through the use of nanotechnology, or materials with nanometer (less than 100 nm) surface features. Results provided evidence that nano-structured polymeric scaffolds (specifically, PLGA and PU) created using chemical etching techniques are capable of enhancing the human bladder smooth muscle cell adhesion, proliferation, and the production of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Preliminary in vivo results also speak to the usefulness of such nano-structured materials. In combination, these findings suggest that nano-dimensional PLGA and PU scaffolds are promising replacement materials for the human bladder wall. [source] Neural control of the lower urinary tract: Peripheral and spinal mechanisms,NEUROUROLOGY AND URODYNAMICS, Issue 1 2010L. Birder Abstract This review deals with individual components regulating the neural control of the urinary bladder. This article will focus on factors and processes involved in the two modes of operation of the bladder: storage and elimination. Topics included in this review include: (1) The urothelium and its roles in sensor and transducer functions including interactions with other cell types within the bladder wall ("sensory web"), (2) The location and properties of bladder afferents including factors involved in regulating afferent sensitization, (3) The neural control of the pelvic floor muscle and pharmacology of urethral and anal sphincters (focusing on monoamine pathways), (4) Efferent pathways to the urinary bladder, and (5) Abnormalities in bladder function including mechanisms underlying comorbid disorders associated with bladder pain syndrome and incontinence. Neurourol. Urodynam. 29: 128,139, 2010. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Biochemical and morphological effects of bladder pumping on the urinary bladder in ratsNEUROUROLOGY AND URODYNAMICS, Issue 5 2002Kimio Sugaya Abstract Aims To study the influence of bladder pumping on the urinary bladder in 44 female rats. Methods Under halothane anesthesia, a urethral catheter was inserted into the bladder of 27 rats, and air (0.4,0.8 mL) was pumped in and out of the bladder at 0.5 cycles/second for a period of 5 minutes. Twenty-four hours after pumping, the bladder was harvested for measurement of the tissue levels of myosin, actin, and nerve growth factor, as well as for electron microscopy. In nine of the 27 rats, cystometry was performed without anesthesia before and 1, 7, 30, and 90 days after bladder pumping. The remaining 17 rats that did not undergo pumping were anesthetized and their bladders were harvested as a control. Results Bladder pumping increased the bladder capacity and decreased the maximum bladder contraction pressure, but did not increase the residual volume. Bladder pumping also increased the tissue level of nerve growth factor and decreased the levels of myosin and actin. Electron microscopy showed degeneration of bladder smooth muscle cells and nerve fibers after bladder pumping, as well as derangement and disruption of collagen fiber bundles in the bladder wall. These functional and morphological effects of pumping disappeared within 90 days. Conclusions Bladder pumping therapy appears to have various effects on the bladder wall collagen fiber bundles, smooth muscle cells, and nerves. Neurourol. Urodynam. 21:511,515, 2002. © Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Differentiation of hydatid cyst from cysticercus cyst by proton MR spectroscopyNMR IN BIOMEDICINE, Issue 5 2002Monika Garg Abstract The metabolite patterns obtained by ex vivo proton MR spectroscopy of fluid from different locations of hydatid cysts of sheep and humans (n,=,16) and cysticercus cysts of swine and humans (n,=,25) were compared with an objective of differentiating the two parasites on the basis of their metabolite pattern. The spectra from hydatid fluid differed from cysticercus cyst by the absence of creatine in the former. When the hydatid cyst was fertile, malate and/or fumarate was also observed, which was absent in cysticercus cyst. The most likely explanation for the presence of creatine only in the cysticercus fluid is its active diffusion from the surrounding host tissue along with a contribution from the musculature present in the bladder wall of the cyst. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Glycinothorax: a new complication of transurethral surgeryANAESTHESIA, Issue 2 2000J. A. L. Pittman A 76-year-old woman sustained inadvertent perforation of her posterior bladder wall during transurethral resection of a bladder tumour. In the immediate postoperative period, she developed life-threatening respiratory failure following the formation of a large, unilateral pleural effusion. After therapeutic drainage, biochemical analysis of the effusion revealed that it had a high concentration of glycine. The fluid used for intra- and postoperative bladder irrigation had leaked from the perforated bladder and collected in the pleural cavity. This type of hydrothorax complicating endoscopic urological surgery has not been described previously. [source] USE OF PORCINE SMALL INTESTINAL SUBMUCOSA IN BLADDER AUGMENTATION IN RABBIT: LONG-TERM HISTOLOGICAL OUTCOMEANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 1-2 2008Ali Ayyildiz Aim: To investigate long-term histological features of bladder augmentation using porcine small intestine submucosa (SIS) in a rabbit model. Materials and method: Sixteen New Zealand rabbits were used. Porcine SIS was provided by a manufactured formation derived from the pig. After partial cystectomy was carried out on the bladder, a single layer of SIS (Cook® -SIS Technology, Cook Biotech Incorporated, West Lafayette, IN, USA) (2 × 5 cm) was sewn to bladder with continuous 5/0 vicryl suture material in a watertight manner. Urinary diversion was not used. The rabbits were killed 12 months later and perivesical fat was removed together with bladder. The 5-,m preparations taken from the samples were stained with haematoxylin,eosin and Mason's trichrome dye. S-100 and F8 stains were also used for immunohistochemical investigations. Results: The macroscopic view of bladder was normal. SIS was indistinguishable from normal bladder wall, but the region of the graft had a slight white coloration. Microscopic observations showed the continuity of transitional epithelium of host bladder tissue on SIS material. Detrusor and serosal layers were formed and these layers were indistinguishable from host bladder. Fibroblasts were scattered among the collagen fibrils. New vessel formations were present without lymphatic proliferation. Nerve regeneration was excellent. No inflammation was observed in normal and regenerated bladder wall. Conclusion: At the end of 12 months, the long-term histological features of bladder augmentation with porcine SIS in a rabbit model, such as presence of new vessel formations, nerve regeneration, collagen and smooth muscle regenerations, which were indistinguishable from original bladder, and the absence of inflammation, showed that SIS seems to be a viable alternative to the use of intestine in bladder augmentation. [source] Emphysematous cystitis: a review of 135 casesBJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2007Anil A. Thomas OBJECTIVE To review recently published data on emphysematous cystitis (EC), a potentially life-threatening condition characterized by air within the bladder wall, and that most typically affects middle-aged diabetic women. METHODS All articles published in English between 1956 and 2006 were identified using a Medline search for keywords ,emphysematous cystitis', and ,cystitis emphysematosa.' Epidemiological, clinical, diagnostic, pathological and therapeutic data were evaluated, including risk factors such as the presence of diabetes mellitus or other comorbid emphysematous infections of the urinary tract. RESULTS In all, 102 published papers, including 135 cases of EC, were reviewed; the median patient age was 66 years, 64% were women and 67% had diabetes mellitus. Most cases were diagnosed using plain films of the abdomen (84%), although more recently, computed tomography was the primary imaging method. Escherichia coli was the most commonly isolated organism. Most patients were treated with medical management alone (90%), while 10% of infections were treated with a combination of medicine and surgery. The overall death rate was 7%. CONCLUSIONS EC is the most common and typically the least severe gas-forming infection of the urinary tract. Prompt diagnosis and treatment is warranted to prevent the potential morbidity and mortality of this infectious condition. [source] Patterns of spread in an orthotopic mouse model of bladder cancerBJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2006J.P. BRENNAN Purpose:, To develop an orthotopic model of muscle-invasive transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder which models primary tumour growth and metastasis. Methodology:, Cell lines were derived from the TCC cell line T24 (Tsu-Pr1) using in vivo selection for metastatic ability (Chaffer et al. Clin Exp Metastasis 2005; 22(2): 115,25). Each of these cell lines (Tsu-Pr1 and sub-lines, B1 and B2) was then injected intramurally into the mouse bladder wall (n = 25 × 3). The cell lines were also injected intravesically and intraperitoneally (n = 15 × 3 in each group). Results:, There were no differences between the three sub-lines in primary tumour formation, presence of macroscopic metastases and survival. This model produced more macroscopic and lymph node metastases in comparison with other orthotopic models reported in the literature. After intraperitoneal injection, the B2 cell line produced a higher number of discrete intra-abdominal masses in comparison with the parental line. This is likely to be related to the phenotype of the cells with parental cells being more mesenchymal, versus the B2 sub-line, which has more epithelial characteristics. Conclusion:, The TSU-Pr1 series is a useful, clinically relevant model of muscle-invasive TCC. In addition, this model may also provide insights into the role of mesenchymal-epithelial transition in the metastatic process. [source] Tissue reaction of the rabbit urinary bladder to tension-free vaginal tape and porcine small intestinal submucosaBJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 6 2002D.M. Rabah Objectives ,To compare the histological tissue reactions of urinary bladder in close contact with polypropylene mesh tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) or porcine small intestinal submucosal (SIS) grafts, as the commercial availability of various materials has considerably simplified sling procedures for treating urinary incontinence, but erosion and infection after using artificial sling materials remain an important concern. Materials and methods ,Thirty female New Zealand rabbits were randomized to three groups, i.e. group A (TVT, 12 animals), group B (SIS, 12) and group C (surgical control, six). Through a laparotomy under anaesthesia and an aseptic technique, the bladder was approached at its dome, where a 0.5 × 1 cm piece of TVT or SIS was fixed in direct contact with the bladder wall. The control group underwent only bladder manipulation with no material applied. Half the animals in each group were killed after 6 weeks and the other half after 12 weeks. The urinary bladder was harvested and examined histologically. Results ,The grafts in both groups were characterized by dense foreign-body type reactions and were mostly attached loosely to the bladder wall by a thin layer of fibrovascular tissue. More importantly, the bladder wall reactions showed no inflammation in all 12 animals in group A (TVT) but three of them had various grades of fibrosis. There was severe transmural inflammation in one animal in group B (SIS); one rabbit had grade I and two had grade II fibrosis. The controls, as expected, showed no bladder wall reactions. Conclusion ,In this descriptive analysis of reaction types elicited on the urinary bladder by these grafts, both materials appeared to be safe. Although TVT elicited fewer and less severe adverse reactions, no statistical conclusions can be drawn. The clinical significance of these findings should emerge from long-term clinical data when they become available. [source] |