עמוד 1 מ 34 תוצאות
Pure dysgerminoma is considered to be a nonsecretary ovarian tumor. In this study serum lactic dehydrogenase, human chorionic gonadotropin, and alkaline phosphatase levels were highly elevated in a 21-year-old woman with unilateral ovarian pure dysgerminoma and fell sharply to normal levels after
We report a 35-year-old Japanese female patient with ovarian dysgerminoma showing elevated serum levels of placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP), neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and prolactin (PRL). All elevated tumor markers improved dramatically after the removal of the tumor. Immunohistochemically
BACKGROUND
Human neoplasms often are accompanied by an inflammatory infiltrate. It has been proposed that this represents an immunologic response to the tumor. Dysgerminoma, a germ cell tumor of the ovary, is a classic example of this phenomenon. The authors investigated the immunophenotype of the
Four patients with stage IA-IIIC dysgerminomas were found to have preoperative elevations of serum lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) 1.8-51.5 times that of the upper limits of normal control values, in association with minor elevations of liver function tests (alkaline phosphatase, serum glutamic
A case of ovarian mixed germ cell tumor in a 44-year-old woman was examined. The tumor was well circumscribed, measured 15 x 11 x 10 cm and appeared solid and partly cystic on the cut surface. Light microscopic examinations revealed that the tumor was composed of four different neoplastic germ cell
Introduction: True hermaphroditism is a rare and usually sporadic disorder. It is defined by the presence of both ovarian and testicular tissues together as ovotestis.
Patient concerns: In this study, we reported a rare true
A 5-year-old girl presented with a painful abdominal mass. Abdominal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed 3 separate masses. Tumor markers including lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), cancer antigen-125 (CA-125), beta-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-hCG) and neuron-specific enolase (NSE)
Gonadoblastoma is a rare ovarian neoplasm which belongs to "germ cell-sex cord-stromal tumor" category. This tumor is frequently associated with invasive germ cell malignancy. It commonly arises in dysgenetic gonads of young individuals who are phenotypically females but possess 46XY karyotype. It
The serum levels of placental alkaline phosphatase were determined with a radioimmunoassay using a polyclonal antibody on 1236 samples from 414 patients with ovarian cancer. The frequencies of elevated enzyme levels for patients with or without evidence of disease were 17.7 and 10.9%, respectively.
A specific radioimmunoassay for human placental alkaline phosphatase has been developed using the 125I-labeled enzyme, highly purified with a fast protein liquid chromatography system and an absorbed rabbit antiserum. The sensitivity of this assay was 0.2 U/L. Serum levels of over 0.2 U/L were found
We established seven hybridomas secreting murine IgG monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) to placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP). The seven hybridomas were designated (1) 7C6, (2) 6G10, (3) 5B9, (4) 6D5, (5) 6B5, (6) 11G6 and (7) 3E10, respectively. The characteristics of these hybridomas were evaluated
BACKGROUND
Paraneoplastic syndromes are disorders caused by cancer that are not a direct result of the cancer mass itself or metastases to the affected organ. Paraneoplastic cholestasis is described with lymphoma and renal cell carcinoma. Unlike ovarian carcinoma, paraneoplastic syndromes are rarely
An immunohistochemical study of 15 ovarian formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded dysgerminomas showed positive staining of tumor cells for vimentin in all cases. Ten dysgerminomas stained for cytokeratin 18. Desmin positivity of single tumor cells was detected in four dysgerminomas. Glial fibrillary
An ovarian enlargement (diameter, 8 cm) was identified and surgically excised from a 5-year-old female dog. Microscopic examination of the multinodular neoplasm revealed sheets of polygonal neoplastic cells with large nuclei, frequent mitosis, necrosis and haemorrhage. Immunohistochemically, the