7 results on '"Kamerow HN"'
Search Results
2. Pseudoendocrine sarcoma: a rare new entity with unique radiologic and pathologic/molecular characteristics.
- Author
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Corey Z, Fanburg-Smith JC, French CN, Walker EA, Kamerow HN, Cochran EL, Smith JD, Flemming DJ, and Murphey MD
- Abstract
Pseudoendocrine sarcoma is a rare, recently described intermediate grade sarcoma of uncertain phenotype that most commonly affects the paraspinal location in older patients with a distinctive endocrine/paraganglioma-like morphology and unique CTNNB1 point mutation. While these tumors appear as epithelial or even benign endocrine tumors, these lack markers for such and are highlighted by nuclear expression of beta-catenin. This case is the first among the previously reported only twenty-five cases of this entity, including one original series and a few case reports, to correlate the radiologic imaging with the pathologic features. Furthermore, this case illustrates the oldest-to-date patient with this unique location as a palpable painful chest wall/paraspinal location, with new morphologic observations and, finally, this is only the second case to have this specific CTNNB1 hotspot point mutation for this rare entity., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Preclinical Demonstration of a Novel Treatment with High Efficacy and No Detectable Toxicity for Inflammatory Skin Conditions including Psoriasis.
- Author
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Vanden Heuvel JP, Zhou S, Patel AB, Kamerow HN, Baran P, and Ford JP
- Subjects
- Humans, Skin pathology, Keratinocytes metabolism, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism, Methotrexate pharmacology, Methotrexate therapeutic use, Cell Proliferation, Psoriasis metabolism
- Abstract
Although the management options for psoriasis have progressed with the use of systemic agents, there are few efficacious nonsteroidal topical therapies for patients with limited or lower grade disease. The effects of allopurinol (Allo) and glutathione (GSH) were examined in two different in vitro models for psoriasis. In the first model, human immortalized keratinocytes (HaCaT) were treated with M5 cocktail (IL-17A, IL-22, oncostatin M, IL-1 α , and TNF- α ) in four interventional groups (control, Allo, oxypurinol (Oxy), and methotrexate (MTX)). The number of live and dead cells was determined after treatment for 48 and 72 hrs. Allo decreased cell proliferation (total cells) without increasing cell death compared to both its xanthine oxidase inhibiting metabolite Oxy and a standard agent in clinical use, MTX. In the second model, a human psoriatic skin equivalent (PSE) culture system, cells were treated with vehicle control, Allo and GSH (as monotherapies and in combination), and vitamin D (VitD) for 2 and 6 days followed by histological analysis and altered gene expression. The combined exposure to Allo and GSH was equivalent to a standard antipsoriasis agent VitD in the inhibition of both proliferative and replicative markers. Histologic examination of the tissue at 6 days of exposure to VitD resulted in loss of the integrity of the squamous/epithelial continuity whereas tissue integrity was preserved with Allo and GSH exposure. The additional exposure of GSH to Allo reversed the increased thickness of the dermis layer caused by Allo exposure alone. Taken together, this data shows that topical Allo and GSH may have a synergistic effect with low toxicity and constitute a therapeutic advantage over current nonsteroidal therapies in the treatment of inflammatory skin conditions marked by increased cell proliferation such as psoriasis., Competing Interests: J.P.V.H. is a shareholder and the chief scientific officer of INDIGO Biosciences, Inc. and chief scientific officer of Asymmetric Therapeutics, LLC, Unadilla, NY. J.P.F. is a principal member of Asymmetric Therapeutics, LLC, Unadilla, NY. All other authors declare that they have no conflicts., (Copyright © 2023 John P. Vanden Heuvel et al.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Disseminated pneumocystosis presenting as a pleural effusion.
- Author
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Jayes RL, Kamerow HN, Hasselquist SM, Delaney MD, and Parenti DM
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Adult, Humans, Injections, Intravenous, Male, Pentamidine administration & dosage, Pentamidine therapeutic use, Pleural Effusion drug therapy, Pleural Effusion pathology, Pneumocystis Infections drug therapy, Pleural Effusion microbiology, Pneumocystis Infections pathology
- Abstract
Extrapulmonary pneumocystosis recently has been reported in a number of tissues. Most cases occurred in patients receiving aerosolized pentamidine prophylaxis. We report a case of disseminated pneumocystosis presenting as a large pleural effusion without apparent lung involvement where Pneumocystis carinii was the only pathogen identified. The absence of parenchymal lesions on chest x-ray film, the lack of hypoxemia and the minimal uptake of gallium all argue against significant lung involvement. The patient was successfully treated with chest tube drainage, intravenous and inhaled pentamidine and orally administered dapsone and trimethoprim. The addition of inhaled pentamidine to intravenously administered pentamidine may have increased pleural fluid levels substantially and its use coincided with the patient's improvement.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Immunocytochemical detection of cyclin, a proliferation-associated protein, in cytologic preparations.
- Author
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Kamerow HN, Perchick A, and Burstein DE
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen, Antigens, Neoplasm analysis, Neoplasms immunology, Nuclear Proteins analysis
- Abstract
Cyclin is a nuclear protein associated with DNA-polymerase delta, whose expression correlates with cell proliferation in vitro. To assess the value of cyclin staining in diagnostic cytology, an anticyclin monoclonal antibody was used to survey cyclin expression in cytologic preparations obtained as "bench top" aspirates from surgically resected specimens. The tissues assayed included carcinomas and normal and benign proliferative tissues of renal, mammary, prostatic and colonic origin. Staining was performed via the avidin-biotin-complex immunoperoxidase method. The staining of tumor cells was nuclear, with sparing of the nucleoli; the results were variable in different areas of a given tumor and varied significantly between tumors of the same histopathologic type. Benign proliferative tissues also showed staining. Nonproliferative tissues, such as renal tubules adjacent to a renal cell adenocarcinoma, were largely, but not entirely, nonstaining. The percentage of cyclin-positive nuclei was sometimes much higher than the typical percentages of tumor cells found in S phase. This observation was confirmed in two cases in which cyclin staining was much greater than the percentage of S-phase cells detected by flow cytometry. This suggests either stabilization of the protein beyond S phase in cells and/or dysregulation of cyclin expression in malignant cells. The viability of unfixed surgically resected tissue may also have affected the detection of cyclin, a problem that should not exist with clinically aspirated tissue fixed immediately after aspiration. These preliminary observations suggest that the selective use of cyclin staining may facilitate cytologic diagnoses. Furthermore, the wide range of cyclin expression within tumors of one histologic type suggests that cyclin expression may serve as a new parameter for investigating tumor behavior and prognosis.
- Published
- 1991
6. Comparison of titratable acid/alkaline reserve and pH in potentially caustic household products.
- Author
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Hoffman RS, Howland MA, Kamerow HN, and Goldfrank LR
- Subjects
- Animals, Burns, Chemical pathology, Caustics analysis, Dogs, Esophagus pathology, Household Products analysis, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Models, Biological, Regression Analysis, Burns, Chemical etiology, Caustics adverse effects, Esophagus injuries, Household Products adverse effects
- Abstract
Exposure to caustic agents is a common problem, affecting thousands of individuals annually. Despite this incidence, the factors responsible for the production of injury remain poorly defined. Although extremes of pH seem to correlate well with the production of esophageal lesions, pH alone fails to explain the damage resulting from exposure to agents with near neutral pH, such as soldering flux containing zinc chloride. We determined titratable acid/alkaline reserve (TAR) in 38 potentially caustic household agents. A subset of these products was evaluated in an in-vitro canine esophageal model to determine whether TAR correlated with esophageal injury. The results indicate that for the products evaluated TAR correlated better than pH with the production of caustic esophageal injury.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Identification of a yellow gene-specific protein in Drosophila melanogaster by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis.
- Author
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Nash WG, Kamerow HN, and Merril CR
- Subjects
- Animals, Drosophila melanogaster metabolism, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Genes, Mutation, Pigmentation, Proteins isolation & purification, Temperature, Drosophila melanogaster genetics, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Analysis of temperature-sensitive mutants suggests that the yellow (y) gene in Drosophila melanogaster is expressed at a different time in each cell type that gives rise to the various structures of the adult cuticle. An important step in analyzing the regulation of this gene requires identification of the y structural protein. A polypeptide has been identified which correlates with the presence or absence of a functional y gene. Furthermore, this protein has the tissue distribution profile expected of the y structural gene product. The ability to locate this gene was facilitated by the use of coisogenic stocks, two-dimensional electrophoretic protein separation, and an ultrasensitive silver protein stain.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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