1.Symptomatic perianeursymal cyst development 20 years after endovascular treatment of a ruptured giant aneurysm: Case report and updated review
Amy J. WANG ; Justin E. VRANIC ; Robert W. REGENHARDT ; Adam A. DMYTRIW ; Christine K. LEE ; Cameron SADEGH ; James D. RABINOV ; Christopher J. STAPLETON
Journal of Cerebrovascular and Endovascular Neurosurgery 2024;26(2):187-195
Perianeurysmal cysts are a rare and poorly understood finding in patients both with treated and untreated aneurysms. While the prior literature suggests that a minority of perianeurysmal cysts develop 1-4 years following endovascular aneurysm treatment, this updated review demonstrates that nearly half of perianeurysmal cysts were diagnosed following aneurysm coiling, with the other half diagnosed concurrently with an associated aneurysm prior to treatment. 64% of perianeurysmal cysts were surgically decompressed, with a 39% rate of recurrence requiring re-operation. We report a case of a 71-year-old woman who presented with vertigo and nausea and was found to have a 3.4 cm perianeurysmal cyst 20 years after initial endovascular coiling of a ruptured giant ophthalmic aneurysm. The cyst was treated with endoscopic fenestration followed by open fenestration upon recurrence. The case represents the longest latency from initial aneurysm treatment to cyst diagnosis reported in the literature and indicates that the diagnosis of perianeurysmal cyst should remain on the differential even decades after treatment. Based on a case discussion and updated literature review, this report highlights proposed etiologies of development and management strategies for a challenging lesion.
2.Gene Expression Profiling and Assessment of Vitamin D and Serotonin Pathway Variations in Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Christopher M DUSSIK ; Maryam HOCKLEY ; Aleksandra GROZIĆ ; Ichiro KANEKO ; Lin ZHANG ; Marya S SABIR ; Jin PARK ; Jie WANG ; Cheryl A NICKERSON ; Steven H YALE ; Christopher J RALL ; Amy E FOXX-ORENSTEIN ; Connie M BORROR ; Todd R SANDRIN ; Peter W JURUTKA
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2018;24(1):96-106
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a multifaceted disorder that afflicts millions of individuals worldwide. IBS is currently diagnosed based on the presence/duration of symptoms and systematic exclusion of other conditions. A more direct manner to identify IBS is needed to reduce healthcare costs and the time required for accurate diagnosis. The overarching objective of this work is to identify gene expression-based biological signatures and biomarkers of IBS. METHODS: Gene transcripts from 24 tissue biopsy samples were hybridized to microarrays for gene expression profiling. A combination of multiple statistical analyses was utilized to narrow the raw microarray data to the top 200 differentially expressed genes between IBS versus control subjects. In addition, quantitative polymerase chain reaction was employed for validation of the DNA microarray data. Gene ontology/pathway enrichment analysis was performed to investigate gene expression patterns in biochemical pathways. Finally, since vitamin D has been shown to modulate serotonin production in some models, the relationship between serum vitamin D and IBS was investigated via 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) chemiluminescence immunoassay. RESULTS: A total of 858 genetic features were identified with differential expression levels between IBS and asymptomatic populations. Gene ontology enrichment analysis revealed the serotonergic pathway as most prevalent among the differentially expressed genes. Further analysis via real-time polymerase chain reaction suggested that IBS patient-derived RNA exhibited lower levels of tryptophan hydroxylase-1 expression, the enzyme that catalyzes the rate-limiting step in serotonin biosynthesis. Finally, mean values for 25(OH)D were lower in IBS patients relative to non-IBS controls. CONCLUSIONS: Values for serum 25(OH)D concentrations exhibited a trend towards lower vitamin D levels within the IBS cohort. In addition, the expression of select IBS genetic biomarkers, including tryptophan hydroxylase 1, was modulated by vitamin D. Strikingly, the direction of gene regulation elicited by vitamin D in colonic cells is “opposite” to the gene expression profile observed in IBS patients, suggesting that vitamin D may help “reverse” the pathological direction of biomarker gene expression in IBS. Thus, our results intimate that IBS pathogenesis and pathophysiology may involve dysregulated serotonin production and/or vitamin D insufficiency.
Biomarkers
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Biopsy
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Cohort Studies
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Colon
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Diagnosis
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Gene Expression Profiling
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Gene Expression
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Gene Ontology
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Health Care Costs
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Humans
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Immunoassay
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome
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Luminescence
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Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
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RNA
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Serotonin
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Transcriptome
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Tryptophan
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Tryptophan Hydroxylase
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Vitamin D
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Vitamins