1.Associations among benign prostate hypertrophy, atypical adenomatous hyperplasia and latent carcinoma of the prostate.
Konstantinos STAMATIOU ; Alevizos ALEVIZOS ; Mohamed NATZAR ; Constantinos MIHAS ; Anargiros MARIOLIS ; Emmanouel MICHALODIMITRAKIS ; Fragiskos SOFRAS
Asian Journal of Andrology 2007;9(2):229-233
AIMTo investigate the frequency of atypical adenomatous hyperplasia (AAH) and its associations with benign prostate hypertrophy (BPH) and latent histological carcinoma of the prostate (LPC) in autopsy material.
METHODSTwo hundred and twelve prostate specimens obtained from autopsy material were subjected to whole mount analysis in an attempt to investigate the associations among BPH, AAH and LPC.
RESULTSMost histological carcinomas and AAH lesions were found in enlarged prostates with intense hypertrophy. No statistically significant relation was found between BPH and the main characteristics of LPC, such as tumor volume, histological differentiation and biological behavior. Our data regarding multi-focal tumors showed a tendency for multi-focal carcinomas to develop in larger prostates, and a tendency of AAH lesions to develop in larger prostates. No statistically significant relation was found between AAH and LPC.
CONCLUSIONThere seems not any causative aetiopathogenetical or topographical relation between AAH lesions and prostate adenocarcinoma. AAH lesion seems to be a well-defined mimicker of prostatic adenocarcinoma, and the reported association of AAH with prostatic carcinoma could probably be an epiphenomenon.
Adenocarcinoma ; diagnosis ; pathology ; Adult ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Autopsy ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Neoplasm Staging ; Prostatic Hyperplasia ; diagnosis ; pathology ; Prostatic Neoplasms ; diagnosis ; pathology
2.The Impact of the Financial Crisis on Lifestyle Health Determinants Among Older Adults Living in the Mediterranean Region: The Multinational MEDIS Study (2005-2015).
Alexandra FOSCOLOU ; Stefanos TYROVOLAS ; George SOULIS ; Anargiros MARIOLIS ; Suzanne PISCOPO ; Giuseppe VALACCHI ; Foteini ANASTASIOU ; Christos LIONIS ; Akis ZEIMBEKIS ; Josep Antoni TUR ; Vassiliki BOUNTZIOUKA ; Dimitra TYROVOLA ; Efthimios GOTSIS ; George METALLINOS ; Antonia Leda MATALAS ; Evangelos POLYCHRONOPOULOS ; Labros SIDOSSIS ; Demosthenes B. PANAGIOTAKOS
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2017;50(1):1-9
OBJECTIVES: By the end of the 2000s, the economic situation in many European countries started to deteriorate, generating financial uncertainty, social insecurity and worse health status. The aim of the present study was to investigate how the recent financial crisis has affected the lifestyle health determinants and behaviours of older adults living in the Mediterranean islands. METHODS: From 2005 to 2015, a population-based, multi-stage convenience sampling method was used to voluntarily enrol 2749 older adults (50% men) from 20 Mediterranean islands and the rural area of the Mani peninsula. Lifestyle status was evaluated as the cumulative score of four components (range, 0 to 6), that is, smoking habits, diet quality (MedDietScore), depression status (Geriatric Depression Scale) and physical activity. RESULTS: Older Mediterranean people enrolled in the study from 2009 onwards showed social isolation and increased smoking, were more prone to depressive symptoms, and adopted less healthy dietary habits, as compared to their counterparts participating earlier in the study (p<0.05), irrespective of age, gender, several clinical characteristics, or socioeconomic status of the participants (an almost 50% adjusted increase in the lifestyle score from before 2009 to after 2009, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: A shift towards less healthy behaviours was noticeable after the economic crisis had commenced. Public health interventions should focus on older adults, particularly of lower socioeconomic levels, in order to effectively reduce the burden of cardiometabolic disease at the population level.
Adult*
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Depression
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Food Habits
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Humans
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Life Style*
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Mediterranean Islands
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Mediterranean Region*
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Methods
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Motor Activity
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Public Health
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Smoke
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Smoking
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Social Class
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Social Isolation
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Uncertainty