1.S1000A12, Chitotriosidase, and Resolvin D1 as Potential Biomarkers of Familial Mediterranean Fever.
Ali TAYLAN ; Oguz GURLER ; Burak TOPRAK ; Ali Riza SISMAN ; Hulya YALCIN ; Ayfer COLAK ; Ismail SARI
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(9):1241-1245
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an auto-inflammatory disease characterised by periodic inflammatory attacks. We investigated changes in monocyte-granulocyte derived S10012A and chitotriosidase in both the attack and silent period of FMF for better estimation of inflammation. Endogenous resolvin was determined for utility to restrict inflammation. This study included 29 FMF patients (15 M/14 F) and 30 healthy controls (15 M/15 F). Serum levels of highly sensitive C-reactive protein, serum amiloid A (SAA), S100A12, chitotriosidase, and resolvin D1 were measured. Age, sex, body mass indexes, and lipids were similar between patients and controls. Biomarkers including hs-CRP, SAA, S100A12, chitotriosidase, and resolvin D1 were higher in the attack period of FMF patients compared to controls (P < 0.001). When FMF patients in the silent period were compared with their attack period, hs-CRP, SAA, and chitotriosidase were found elevated in the attack period (P < 0.001, P < 0.001, and P = 0.02 respectively). Serum levels of SAA, S100A12, chitotriosidase, and resolvin D1 in the silent period of FMF patients were still found elevated compared to healthy controls, indicating subclinical inflammation (P < 0.001, P < 0.001, P = 0.009, and P < 0.001 respectively ). In subgroup analysis, patients with M694V homozygote and heterozygote mutations had higher S10012A and hs-CRP compared to other mutation carriers. Our findings indicate that chitotriosidase and S10012A are useful in diagnosis and detection of subclinical inflammation and/or assessment of disease activity in FMF patients. They could be more informative for inflammation in various disease states compared to hsCRP and SAA. Resolvin D1 is elevated in both the attack and silent periods of FMF. It may be helpful to restrict inflammation.
Adult
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Biomarkers
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Docosahexaenoic Acids/*blood
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Familial Mediterranean Fever/*blood/*diagnosis
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Feasibility Studies
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Female
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Hexosaminidases/*blood
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Humans
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Male
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Reproducibility of Results
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S100A12 Protein/*blood
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Sensitivity and Specificity
2.A Case of Adult-Onset Still's Disease Complicated with Diffuse Alveolar Hemorrhage.
Ismail SARI ; Merih BIRLIK ; Omer BINICIER ; Servet AKAR ; Erkan YILMAZ ; Fatos ONEN ; Nurullah AKKOC
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2009;24(1):155-157
Adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) is an inflammatory disease that presents with a variety of clinical symptoms. Pulmonary involvement is well-known in AOSD and is seen in up to 53% of AOSD cases, with the most common pulmonary diseases being pleural effusion and transient pulmonary infiltrates. We present the first case of chronic AOSD complicated with diffuse alveolar hemorrhage during the acute flare of the disease.
Adult
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Ankylosis/diagnosis
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Anti-Inflammatory Agents/administration & dosage
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Female
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Fever of Unknown Origin/diagnosis
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Hemorrhage/*diagnosis/drug therapy/etiology
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Humans
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Lung Diseases/*diagnosis/drug therapy/etiology
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Methylprednisolone/administration & dosage
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*Pulmonary Alveoli
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Still's Disease, Adult-Onset/complications/*diagnosis/drug therapy/radiography
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
3.Clinicopathologic Characteristics and Therapeutic Outcomes of Primary Gastrointestinal Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas in Central Anatolia, in Turkey.
Bulent ESER ; Bunyamin KAPLAN ; Ali UNAL ; Ozlem CANOZ ; Fevzi ALTUNTAS ; H Ismail SARI ; Ozlem ER ; Metin OZKAN ; Can KUCUK ; Makbule ARAR ; Sebnem GURSOY ; Mustafa CETIN
Yonsei Medical Journal 2006;47(1):22-33
Primary gastrointestinal lymphoma is a common presentation of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The main controversy arises when many aspects of its classification and management are under discussion, particularly regarding roles for surgical resection. The aim of this study was to evaluate clinicopathologic characteristics and the therapeutic outcome of primary gastrointestinal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. We carried out a retrospective analysis of 74 patients who were presented to our center with histopathological diagnosis of primary gastro-intestinal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma between 1990 and 2001. All patients have been staged according to Lugano Staging System. For histopathological classification, International Working Formulation was applied. The treatment choice concerning the surgical or non-surgical management was decided by the initially acting physician. Treatment modalities were compared using the parameters of age, sex, histopathological results, stage, and the site of disease. Of the 74 patients, 31 were female and 43 were male, with a median age of 49 years (range 15-80). The stomach was the most common primary site and was seen in 51 of 74 patients (68.9%). The intermediate and high grade lymphomas constituted 91.9% of the all cases. In a median follow-up of 29 months (range 2-128), 20 out of 74 patients died. There was a three year overall survival rate in 65.4% of all patients. The three year overall survival rate was better in stage I and II1 patients who were treated with surgery plus chemotherapy (+/-RT) than those treated with chemotherapy alone (93.7% vs. 55.6%, p<0.05). The stage and presence of B symptoms affected the disease free survival and overall survival significantly, but the histopathologic grade only affected the overall survival. On the basis of these results, we suggest that surgical resection is necessary before chemotherapy in early stage (stage I and II1) patients with gastrointestinal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas because of the significant survival advantage it would bring to the patient.
Turkey/epidemiology
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Treatment Outcome
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Survival Rate
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Retrospective Studies
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Neoplasm Staging
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Middle Aged
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Male
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Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/mortality/*pathology/*therapy
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Humans
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Gastrointestinal Diseases/mortality/*pathology/*therapy
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Female
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Combined Modality Therapy/adverse effects
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Aged, 80 and over
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Aged
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Adult
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Adolescent
4.Acute coronary syndrome in the elderly: the Malaysian National Cardiovascular Disease Database-Acute Coronary Syndrome registry.
Ahmad Syadi Mahmood ZUHDI ; Wan Azman Wan AHMAD ; Rafdzah Ahmad ZAKI ; Jeevitha MARIAPUN ; Rosli Mohd ALI ; Norashikin Md SARI ; Muhammad Dzafir ISMAIL ; Sim Kui HIAN
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(4):191-197
INTRODUCTIONThe elderly are often underrepresented in clinical trials for acute coronary syndrome (ACS), and cardiologists commonly face management dilemmas in the choice of treatment for this group of patients, particularly concerning the use of invasive revascularisation. This study analysed the characteristics of hospitalised elderly patients with ACS, and compared the outcomes of treatments.
METHODSFrom 29 December 2005 to 26 April 2010, 13,545 patients were admitted for ACS in 16 hospitals across Malaysia. These patients were divided into two groups - elderly (≥ 65 years) and non-elderly (< 65 years). The clinical characteristics, treatment received (invasive or non-invasive) and outcomes (in-hospital and 30-day all-cause mortality) of the two groups were compared. The elderly patients were then grouped according to the type of treatment received, and the outcomes of the two subgroups were compared.
RESULTSElderly patients had a higher cardiovascular risk burden and a higher incidence of comorbidities. They were less likely to receive urgent revascularisation for acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (elderly: 73.9% vs. non-elderly: 81.4%) and had longer door-to-needle time (elderly: 60 minutes vs. non-elderly: 50 minutes, p = 0.004). The rate of cardiac catheterisation was significantly lower in the elderly group across all ACS strata. Elderly patients had poorer outcomes than non-elderly patients, but those who received invasive treatment appeared to have better outcomes than those who received non-invasive treatment.
CONCLUSIONElderly patients with ACS tend to be undertreated, both invasively and pharmacologically. Invasive treatment seems to yield better outcomes for this group of patients.
Acute Coronary Syndrome ; epidemiology ; Age Factors ; Aged ; Cardiovascular Diseases ; epidemiology ; Databases, Factual ; Female ; Humans ; Malaysia ; epidemiology ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Morbidity ; trends ; Registries ; Survival Rate ; trends