1.Effect on Antioxidant Levels in Patients of Breast Carcinoma during Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy and Mastectomy
Gurpreet Singh ; SK Maulik ; Amardeep Jaiswal ; Pratik Kumar ; Rajinder Parshad
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences 2010;17(2):24-28
Background: Breast cancer is the most common cancer in Indian women. The aim of this
study was to assess the levels of red blood cell (RBC) superoxide dismutase (r-SOD), RBC catalase
(r-CAT), RBC glutathione peroxidase (r-GPx) and the ferric reducing ability of plasma (FRAP) in
advanced breast cancer patients post mastectomy before and after chemotherapy.
Methods: Female breast cancer patients between 27 and 65 years of age who were admitted to
the Department of Surgery of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi were enrolled
in the study. This study included two arms: a control group of healthy age-matched females (n=20)
and patients undergoing treatment with a combination of the anticancer drugs cyclophosphamide,
doxorubicin, and 5-fluorouracil (CAF) (n=55), No treatment was given to the control group. The
CAF group received CAF treatment at weeks 0, 3, and 6, then surgery at week 9 followed by CAF
treatment at weeks 12, 15, and 18. A three-week drug-free interval was included between each cycle
of drug treatment. Blood samples were collected from control subjects and from patients in the CAF
group before administration of drugs at week zero to establish a baseline, again weeks 12 and 18, and
once more at the end of the 26-week treatment. Blood samples collected from the control subjects
and CAF patients were analysed to determine levels of the endogenous antioxidants, r-SOD, r-CAT,
r-GPx, and FRAP.
Results: Levels of r-SOD, r-CAT, r-GPx, and FRAP in CAF-treated patients at 12, 18, and 26
weeks were significantly decreased (P<0.001) in comparison to the baseline levels observed at week
zero.
Conclusion: The results from the present study show that a change in the enzyme antioxidant
systems in patients after chemotherapy and mastectomy causes an overall decrease in antioxidant
levels. Chemotherapeutic agents induce oxidative stress that damages many cellular targets.
2.Expression of von Willebrand factor, pulmonary intravascular macrophages, and Toll-like receptors in lungs of septic foals.
Jacqueline M E HARRISON ; Leah M QUANSTROM ; Alex R ROBINSON ; Bruce WOBESER ; Stacy L ANDERSON ; Baljit SINGH
Journal of Veterinary Science 2017;18(1):17-23
Sepsis causes significant mortality in neonatal foals; however, there is little data describing the cellular and molecular pathways of lung inflammation in septic foals. This study was conducted to characterize lung inflammation in septic foals. Lung tissue sections from control (n = 6) and septic (n = 17) foals were compared using histology and immunohistology. Blinded pathologic scoring of hematoxylin and eosin stained samples revealed increased features of lung inflammation such as thickened alveolar septa and sequestered inflammatory cells in septic foals. Septic foal lungs showed increased expression of von Willebrand factor in blood vessels, demonstrating vascular inflammation. Use of MAC387 antibody to detect calprotectin as a reflection of mononuclear cell infiltration revealed a significant increase in their numbers in alveolar septa of lungs from septic foals compared to those from control foals. The mononuclear cells appeared to be mature macrophages and were located in the septal capillaries, suggesting they were pulmonary intravascular macrophages (PIMs). Finally, lungs from septic foals showed increased expression of Toll-like receptor 4 and 9 in mononuclear cells relative to the control. Taken together, this study is the first to show the expression of inflammatory molecules and an increase in PIMs in lungs from foals that died from sepsis.
Blood Vessels
;
Capillaries
;
Eosine Yellowish-(YS)
;
Hematoxylin
;
Horses
;
Immunohistochemistry
;
Inflammation
;
Leukocyte L1 Antigen Complex
;
Lung*
;
Macrophages*
;
Mortality
;
Pneumonia
;
Sepsis
;
Toll-Like Receptor 4
;
Toll-Like Receptors*
;
von Willebrand Factor*
3.Predicting Quadruple Semitendinosus Graft Size for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction by Patient Anthropometric Variables: A Cohort Study of 280 Cases
Singhal D ; Kanodia N ; Singh R ; Singh SK ; Agrawal S
Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal 2021;15(No.3):71-77
Introduction: Pre-operative identification of patients with
inadequate hamstring graft for anterior cruciate ligament
reconstruction is still a subject of interest. The purpose of
this study is to correlate dimension of a harvested
dimensions graft with patient physical anthropometric
variables.
Materials and methods: This cohort study included 280
patients (male = 226, female = 54) scheduled for primary
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction.
Interrelationships between quadruple semitendinosus (ST)
graft and anthropometric parameters (age, sex, height,
weight, and BMI) were assessed using Pearson Correlation
test and regression analysis. Difference among gender was
analysed using Mann Whitney and t test. The observed graft
diameter was also compared with the literature using Bland
– Altman plot.
Results: Mean age of cohort was 29 years (range, 17-50
years), mean height was 1.69m (range, 1.6-1.9m), mean
weight was 75 kg (range, 50-116kg) and mean BMI was
26kg/m2 (range 16.65-40.40kg/m2). Mean quadruple length
of harvested ST graft was 7cm (7.1±0.6 cm, range, 5.6-
8.8cm) and mean diameter was 8mm (8.2±0.8mm, range,
6.5-10mm). Only height and weight were significantly
correlated with graft length and diameter in both sex (p value
<0.05). Female, compared to male, had significantly smaller
(p<0.0001) and thinner graft (p<0.0001). There was a strong
agreement between the literature and our observed graft
diameter, but with an overestimated graft diameter in 18.5%
of the cases.
Conclusion: Among anthropometric parameter, only height
and weight had moderate positive correlation with graft
diameter. Males had longer and wider ST graft in contrast to
age-matched female group.