Residual Mass (residual + mass)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences


Selected Abstracts


Mild stress during development affects the phenotype of great tit Parus major nestlings: a challenge experiment

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2010
WILLEM TALLOEN
Conditions experienced during early development may affect both adult phenotype and performance later during life. Phenotypic traits may hence be used to indicate past growing conditions and predict future survival probabilities. Relationships between phenotypic markers and future survival are, however, highly heterogeneous, possibly because poor- and high-quality individuals cannot be morphologically discriminated when developing under good environmental conditions. Sub-optimal breeding conditions, in contrast, may unmask poor-quality individuals in a measurable way at the morphological level. We thus predict stronger associations between phenotype and performance under stress. In this field study, we test this hypothesis, experimentally challenging the homeostasis of great tit (Parus major) nestlings by short-term deprivation of parental care, which had no immediate effect on nestling fitness. The experiment was replicated during two subsequent breeding seasons with contrasting ambient weather conditions. Experimental (short-term) stress affected tarsus growth but not residual mass at fledging, whereas ambient (continuous) stress affected residual mass but not tarsus growth. Short-term stress effects on tarsus length and tarsus fluctuating asymmetry were only apparent when ambient conditions were unfavourable. Residual mass and hatching date, but none of the other phenotypic traits, predicted local survival, whereby the strength of the relationship did not vary between both years. Because effects of stress on developmental homeostasis are likely to be trait-specific and condition-dependent, studies on the use of phenotypic markers for individual fitness should integrate multiple traits comprising different levels of developmental complexity. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 100, 103,110. [source]


Long-term results after excision of breast mass using a vacuum-assisted biopsy device

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 11 2009
Cha Kyong Yom
Abstract Background:, The excision of breast lesions using an ultrasound-guided vacuum-assisted biopsy device (VABD) is a widely used technique for the diagnosis and treatment of breast disease, but the results of long-term follow-up after VABD excision of benign breast tumours have not been reported. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the results of long-term follow-up after complete excision of benign breast tumours using an ultrasound-guided VABD. Methods:, This is a retrospective clinical study. Between January 2001 and December 2004, patients who had undergone VABD excision of benign breast tumours and been followed up by clinical examination and ultrasonography for 2 years or more were included. Results:, One hundred eighty-four cases representing 153 patients were studied. The median follow-up period was 33 months (range, 24,67 months). All lesions were histologically benign. The mean size of the lesions was 1.09 ± 0.57 cm (range, 0.3,3.03 cm). Within 2 years after VABD excision, residual lesions were detected in 10% of patients sonographically, but after 2 years or more, residual masses were found in 6.5% of patients. Scar changes also decreased from 36.0% to 15.8% during the period of follow-up. Finally, the benign breast tumours were completely excised without residual masses in 93.5% of the participant patients. Residual masses developed in two fibroadenoma cases (1.08%); one was re-excised and the other was followed serially. Conclusion:, Ultrasound-guided VABD excision is a minimally invasive technique for the complete removal of benign breast tumours. The results of this long-term follow-up of VABD excisions are comparable to conventional methods. [source]


Energetic trade-off between maintenance costs and flight capacity in the sand cricket (Gryllus firmus)

FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2008
R. F. Nespolo
Summary 1Energetic trade-offs are those compromises that appear when the energy budget of an individual's life history closely matches or exceeds the net available energy in the environment in a given moment. In these situations, two or more functions can compete and organisms face physiological decisions in order to survive and reproduce. 2In insects, one of the most costly investments is flight capacity, which increases dispersal capacity but is energetically expensive. Adult sand crickets (Gryllus firmus) can vary drastically in this capacity, being macropterous or micropterous depending on whether they exhibit flight-capable wings. However, this binary phenotype has a continuous subjacent determinant in the macropterous morph which is the mass of the muscles that power flight, the dorso-longitudinal muscles (DLM). 3Using respirometric measurements, we studied a potential trade-off between body parts, the mass of the DLM and energy metabolism (including both maximum and average metabolism). By recording the metabolic rate of c. 180 crickets and then dissecting and weighing their body parts, we took advantage of the correlational structure to infer associations between energetic and morphological variables. We found that the residual mass of the DLM shows a quadratic relationship with residual resting and average metabolism: at low DLM mass there is a negative relationship, which becomes positive at higher DLM mass. 4We suggest that this pattern of covariance is a consequence of the negative correlation between DLM mass and gonad mass, and the relative contribution of functional vs. non-functional DLM. Then, by using energetics and a combination of multivariate and correlational statistics we were able to show how two important life-history functions (i.e. Dispersal and fecundity) compete for the same resources in an insect species. [source]


Utility of positron emission tomography for the detection of disease in residual neck nodes after (chemo)radiotherapy in head and neck cancer

HEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 3 2005
FRANZCR, Sandro V. Porceddu MBBS
Abstract Background. This study evaluates the utility of fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) in patients with a node-positive mucosal head and neck squamous cell carcinoma who achieved a complete response at the primary site but had a residual mass in the neck 8 weeks or more after definitive (chemo)radiotherapy. Methods. Between October 1996 and July 2002, 39 eligible patients were identified. The reference PET scan was performed at a median of 12 weeks (range, 8,32 weeks) after treatment. Results. PET showed no metabolic activity in the residual mass in 32 patients. Five of these patients had a neck dissection and were all pathologically negative. The remaining 27 patients were observed for a median of 34 months (range, 16,86 months), with only one locoregional failure. The negative predictive value of PET for viable disease in a residual anatomic abnormality was 97%. Conclusion. Patients who have achieved a complete response at the primary site but have a residual abnormality in the neck that is PET negative approximately 12 weeks after treatment do not require neck dissection and can be safely observed. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck27: 175,181, 2005 [source]


In vitro cytotoxicity of dental composites based on new and traditional polymerization chemistries,

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH, Issue 2 2007
M. Goël Brackett
Abstract The biological response to dental restorative polymer composites is mediated by the release of unpolymerized residual monomers. Several new composite formulations claim to reduce unpolymerized residual mass. The current study assessed the cytotoxic responses to several of these new formations and compared them with more traditional formulations. Our hypothesis predicted that if these new polymerization chemistries reduce unpolymerized residual mass, the cytotoxicity of these materials also should be reduced relative to traditional formulations. Methods: Materials (HerculiteXRV, Premise, Filtek Supreme, CeramxDuo, Hermes, and Quixfil) were tested in vitro in direct contact with Balb mouse fibroblasts, initially, then after aging in artificial saliva for 0, 1, 3, 5, or 8 weeks. The toxicity was determined by using the MTT assay to the estimate SDH activity. Knoop hardness of the materials also was measured at 0 and 8 weeks to determine whether surface breakdown of the materials in artificial saliva contributed to cytotoxic responses. Results: Materials with traditional methacrylate chemistries (Herculite, Premise, Filtek Supreme) were severely (>50%) cytotoxic throughout the 8-week interval, but materials with newer chemistries or filling strategies (Hermes, CeramXDuo, and Quixfil) improved over time of aging in artificial saliva. Hermes showed the least cytotoxicity at 8 weeks, and was statistically equivalent to Teflon® negative controls. Hardness of the materials was unaffected by exposure to artificial saliva. Conclusions: Newer polymerization and filling strategies for dental composites show promise for reducing the release of unpolymerized components and cytotoxicity. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2006 [source]


Carotenoid and protein supplementation have differential effects on pheasant ornamentation and immunity

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
H. G. SMITH
Abstract A currently popular hypothesis states that the expression of carotenoid-dependent sexual ornaments and immune function may be correlated because both traits are positively affected by carotenoids. However, such a correlation may arise for another reason: it is well known that immune function is dependent on nutritional condition. A recent study has suggested that the expression of ornaments may too depend on nutritional condition, as males in good nutritional condition are better at assimilating and/or modulating carotenoids. Thus, carotenoid-dependent ornaments and immune function may be correlated because both are dependent on nutritional condition. To elucidate if, and how, ornamentation and immune function are linked, pheasant diets were supplemented with carotenoid and/or protein in a fully factorial experiment. Carotenoid treatment affected wattle coloration and tail growth, but not cellular or humoral immunity. Immunity was unrelated to males' initial ornamentation including wattle colour. Males in better body condition, measured as residual mass, increased their wattle coloration more when carotenoid supplemented. Protein positively affected humoral but not cellular immunity, but had no effect on ornaments. Cellular, but not humoral, immunity increased with male body condition. Thus, there was no evidence that an immune-stimulatory effect of carotenoids resulted in wattle coloration honestly signalling immune function, but wattle coloration may still signal male body condition. [source]


Preliminary evaluation of the performance of an adsorption-based hydrogen storage system

AICHE JOURNAL, Issue 11 2009
Marc-André Richard
Abstract Using modeling and thermal simulations, the feasibility of an adsorption-based hydrogen storage system for vehicles is evaluated. The storage capacity of a 150 L tank filled with a high surface-area activated carbon is mapped for temperatures from 60 to 298 K and pressures up to 35 MPa. The thermal simulations are verified using experiments. For a storage capacity target of 5 kg, the adsorption-based storage system will offer a storage advantage over the cryogenic gas storage if the residual mass of hydrogen in the tank is retrieved by heating. For a discharge rate of 1.8 g/s, the required heat is of the order of 500 W. The net energy requirements for the refueling has contributions from compression, precooling and tank cooling and can approach that for liquid hydrogen storage. With a good insulation and a maximum tank pressure of 35 MPa, the dormancy period can be extended to several weeks. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2009 [source]


Adult primary extragonadal germ cell tumors: Treatment results and long-term follow-up

PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, Issue 1 2003
Argon Andac MD
Abstract Background Primary extragonadal germ cell tumors (PEGCT) are rare neoplasms. They have a poor prognosis, different behavior, and natural course compared to their gonadal counterparts. Both primary and salvage treatment of these tumors constitute a challenge. We retrospectively evaluated the clinicopathologic status, therapeutic implications, and outcome of our patients with PEGCT. Procedure Between 1991 and 2000, 18 patients with PEGCT (median age 31 years; range 17,63), diagnosed with tru-cut biopsy and treated with cisplatin-based chemotherapy, were evaluated in respect to treatment response and outcome. Results Cisplatin-based chemotherapy achieved a complete response rate of 27.8% and a partial response rate of 55.5%. Overall response rate was 83.3%. Only three patients were unresponsive to chemotherapy; an additional six patients with residual mass underwent surgical resection and were rendered disease-free by surgery. The 5-year actuarial event-free and overall survival were 63.4 and 71.3%, respectively. Conclusions The outcomes of our patients with extragonadal primaries including mediastinal localization appear to be slightly better than those previously reported. Multimodality therapy is essential for these patients and given the relatively poor prognosis, prospective trials with large sample sizes, and new treatment approaches to improve outcome are required. Med Pediatr Oncol 2003;41:49,53. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Clinical Implications of Advances in the Basic Science of Liver Repair and Regeneration

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 9 2009
S. J. Karp
Recent advances in our understanding of the basic mechanisms that control liver regeneration and repair will produce the next generation of therapies for human liver disease. Insights gained from large-scale genetic analysis are producing a new framework within which to plan interventions. Identification of specific molecules that drive regeneration will increase the options for live-donor liver transplantation, and help treat patients with small-for-size syndrome or large tumors who would otherwise have inadequate residual mass after resection. In a complementary fashion, breakthroughs in the ability to manipulate various cell types to adopt the hepatocyte or cholangiocyte phenotype promise to revolutionize therapy for acute liver failure and metabolic liver disease. Finally, elucidating the complex interactions of liver cells with each other and various matrix components during the response to injury is essential for fabricating a liver replacement device. This focused review will discuss how a variety of important scientific advances are likely to impact the treatment of specific types of liver disease. [source]


Mild stress during development affects the phenotype of great tit Parus major nestlings: a challenge experiment

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2010
WILLEM TALLOEN
Conditions experienced during early development may affect both adult phenotype and performance later during life. Phenotypic traits may hence be used to indicate past growing conditions and predict future survival probabilities. Relationships between phenotypic markers and future survival are, however, highly heterogeneous, possibly because poor- and high-quality individuals cannot be morphologically discriminated when developing under good environmental conditions. Sub-optimal breeding conditions, in contrast, may unmask poor-quality individuals in a measurable way at the morphological level. We thus predict stronger associations between phenotype and performance under stress. In this field study, we test this hypothesis, experimentally challenging the homeostasis of great tit (Parus major) nestlings by short-term deprivation of parental care, which had no immediate effect on nestling fitness. The experiment was replicated during two subsequent breeding seasons with contrasting ambient weather conditions. Experimental (short-term) stress affected tarsus growth but not residual mass at fledging, whereas ambient (continuous) stress affected residual mass but not tarsus growth. Short-term stress effects on tarsus length and tarsus fluctuating asymmetry were only apparent when ambient conditions were unfavourable. Residual mass and hatching date, but none of the other phenotypic traits, predicted local survival, whereby the strength of the relationship did not vary between both years. Because effects of stress on developmental homeostasis are likely to be trait-specific and condition-dependent, studies on the use of phenotypic markers for individual fitness should integrate multiple traits comprising different levels of developmental complexity. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 100, 103,110. [source]


Long-term results of a combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin and gemcitabine for salvage therapy in male germ-cell tumours

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 3 2009
Nicola Nicolai
OBJECTIVE To retrospectively review the long-term activity, efficacy and toxicity of the combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin and gemcitabine (TPG) as third- or further-line chemotherapy in patients with germ-cell tumours (GCTs) who are not cured after at least two courses of standard-dose chemotherapy, high-dose chemotherapy or both. PATIENTS AND METHODS We evaluated 22 consecutive men treated between April 1999 and December 2000. Half of them were classified as absolutely refractory to cisplatin and a further two as refractory. The median (range) number of previous courses of chemotherapy was 8 (5,11). Treatment consisted of paclitaxel 80 mg/m2, cisplatin 50 mg/m2 and gemcitabine 800 mg/m2 on days 1 and 8, every 3 weeks for four courses, followed by surgery of actual residual resectable masses. RESULTS The follow-up was updated at August 2007. There were no deaths from toxicity and only one patient needed suspension of therapy for toxicity. There was both grade 3,4 thrombocytopenia and neutropenia in 15 patients (68%), and anaemia in nine (41%). There were partial remissions in eight (36%) patients. Six (27%) patients were rendered disease-free with surgical removal of a residual mass after chemotherapy (two still containing viable cancer). Four (18%) patients are long-term survivors at more than 80, 81, 94 and 99 months. The median (range) overall survival of the whole series was 13.5 (1,>99) months. CONCLUSION This combination had a toxicity profile that was acceptable and comparable with other third-line regimens. There were eight (36%) major responses. After a 6-year minimum follow-up, four (18%) patients were long-term disease-free survivors. [source]


Long-term results after excision of breast mass using a vacuum-assisted biopsy device

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 11 2009
Cha Kyong Yom
Abstract Background:, The excision of breast lesions using an ultrasound-guided vacuum-assisted biopsy device (VABD) is a widely used technique for the diagnosis and treatment of breast disease, but the results of long-term follow-up after VABD excision of benign breast tumours have not been reported. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the results of long-term follow-up after complete excision of benign breast tumours using an ultrasound-guided VABD. Methods:, This is a retrospective clinical study. Between January 2001 and December 2004, patients who had undergone VABD excision of benign breast tumours and been followed up by clinical examination and ultrasonography for 2 years or more were included. Results:, One hundred eighty-four cases representing 153 patients were studied. The median follow-up period was 33 months (range, 24,67 months). All lesions were histologically benign. The mean size of the lesions was 1.09 ± 0.57 cm (range, 0.3,3.03 cm). Within 2 years after VABD excision, residual lesions were detected in 10% of patients sonographically, but after 2 years or more, residual masses were found in 6.5% of patients. Scar changes also decreased from 36.0% to 15.8% during the period of follow-up. Finally, the benign breast tumours were completely excised without residual masses in 93.5% of the participant patients. Residual masses developed in two fibroadenoma cases (1.08%); one was re-excised and the other was followed serially. Conclusion:, Ultrasound-guided VABD excision is a minimally invasive technique for the complete removal of benign breast tumours. The results of this long-term follow-up of VABD excisions are comparable to conventional methods. [source]


38 Antegrade ejaculation can be preserved after lumbar sympathetic nerve sparing during post chemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection for testicular cancer

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2006
M.I. PATEL
Resection of residual masses in the retroperitoneum (RPLND), following chemotherapy for testicular cancer was traditionally performed by full bilateral dissection. To minimise the loss of antegrade ejaculation (AGE), a new technique of modified template dissection (contralateral lymphnodes were not dissected in order to preserve the lumbar sympathetic nerves and maintain AGE) was later developed. More recently, lumbar sympathetic nerves have been individually dissected and preserved (sparing) in an attempt to maintain AGE. In this study we report on 18 consecutive men with postchemotherapy testicular cancer who under went RPLND. In each man the limit of dissection and number of sympathetic nerves "spared" or left undissected along with the lymphnodes (modified template) were recorded prospectively. Postoperatively all men were questioned about their ejaculation status. Of the 18 men, 10 men had left sided primary testicular tumours. 10 men had para-aortic lymphnode masses, eight had interaortocaval masses and one also had a paracaval mass. Masses ranged from 155 mm to 10 mm. Fourteen men had bilateral resections and four men had unilateral resections because of extremely small masses. With regards to nerve preservation, two men had complete sympathetic nerve resection and neither has AGE. All other men had between one and five nerves spared, and all these men have preserved antegrade ejaculation. Median follow up is 12 months, and no man has yet suffered an in-field recurrence. In conclusion, preservation of even one lumbar sympathetic nerve can maintain AGE, and does not appear to compromise tumour eradication. [source]


Positron emission tomography for urological tumours

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2003
S.F. Hain
SUMMARY For urological tumours, positron emission tomography (PET) is currently most useful in testicular cancer. In patients with residual masses or raised marker levels after treatment, PET is both sensitive and specific for detecting recurrent disease, at suspected and unsuspected sites. Although fewer studies are available it also appears to be useful for staging at diagnosis, although this requires further investigation. Prostate cancer imaging has been more variable, with studies showing that PET cannot reliably differentiate between tumour and hypertrophy. It is not as good as a bone scan for defining bone metastases. In renal cancer, PET can be used to define the primary tumour, providing better staging of local recurrence than computed tomography (CT), and to define metastatic disease. There are few studies in bladder cancer, and despite excretion of the tracer via the bladder in early studies, it has better results than CT or magnetic resonance imaging for local staging; again it can detect metastases. Overall, the place of PET in urological tumours is developing, with the strongest areas undoubtedly being testicular and renal cancer. Tracers other than fluorodeoxyglucose are being examined and are providing further information. [source]


Prospective comparison of [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography with conventional assessment by computed tomography scans and serum tumor markers for the evaluation of residual masses in patients with nonseminomatous germ cell carcinoma

CANCER, Issue 9 2002
Christian Kollmannsberger M.D.
Abstract BACKGROUND To assess the ability of [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose (F-18 FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) to predict the viability of residual masses after chemotherapy in patients with metastatic nonseminomatous germ cell tumors (GCT), PET results were compared in a blinded analysis with computed tomography (CT) scans and serum tumor marker changes (TUM) as established methods of assessment. METHODS Independent reviewers who were blinded to each other's results evaluated the PET results and corresponding CT scan and TUM results in 85 residual lesions from 45 patients. All patients were treated within prospective clinical trials and received primary/salvage, high-dose chemotherapy with autologous blood stem cell support for primary poor prognosis disease or recurrent disease. PET results were assessed both visually and by quantifying glucose uptake (standardized uptake values). Results were validated either by histologic examination of a resected mass and/or biopsy (n = 28 lesions) or by a 6-month clinical follow-up after evaluation (n = 57 lesions). RESULTS F-18 FDG PET showed increased tracer uptake in 32 of 85 residual lesions, with 29 true positive (TP) lesions and three false positive (FP) lesions. Fifty-three lesions were classified by PET as negative (no viable GCT), 33 lesions were classified by PET as true negative (TN), and 20 lesions were classified by PET as false negative (FN). In the blinded reading of the corresponding CT scan and TUM results, 38 residual lesions were assessed correctly as containing viable carcinoma and/or teratoma. Forty-six lesions were classified as nonsuspicious by CT scan/TUM (33 TN lesions and 14 falsely classified lesions). PET correctly predicted the presence of viable carcinoma in 5 of these 14 and the absence of viable carcinoma in 3 of these 14 lesions. Resulting sensitivities and specificities for the prediction of residual mass viability were as follows: PET, 59% sensitivity and 92% specificity; radiologic monitoring, 55% sensitivity and 86% specificity; and TUM, 42% sensitivity and 100% specificity. The positive and negative predictive values for PET were 91% and 62%, respectively. The diagnostic efficacy of PET did not improve when patients with teratomatous elements in the primary tumor were excluded from the analysis. In patients with multiple residual masses, a uniformly increased residual F-18 FDG uptake in all lesions was a strong predictor for the presence of viable carcinoma. CONCLUSIONS F-18 FDG PET imaging performed in conjunction with conventional staging methods offers additional information for the prediction of residual mass histology in patients with nonseminomatous GCT. A positive PET is highly predictive for the presence of viable carcinoma. Other useful indications for a PET examination include patients with multiple residual masses and patients with marker negative disease. Cancer 2002;94:2353,62. © 2002 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.10494 [source]