Echodefecography may be used to assess patients with obstructed defecation, as it is able to detect the same anorectal dysfunctions found by defecography. It is minimally invasive and well tolerated, avoids exposure to radiation, and clearly demonstrates all the anatomic structures involved in defecation.
populations of men and women in each group were analyzed sepaClinical Infectious Diseases 1997;25:332-3 rately (Spearman correlation Å 0.74; P Å .0001 for men; Spearman ᭧ 1997 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
Objective This study aims to determine changes in the proportions of types I and III collagen in hemorrhoids and to verify the sliding anal canal lining theory.
Patients and method The study is focused on a sample of 17 patients, 9 females and 8 males (age range: 30–70 years), with grade III and grade IV hemorrhoids. Tissue from 4 fetuses (age: 16 weeks of gestation) was used as control sample. All the participants gave their informed consent. Samples were gathered in 2014. All patients underwent open hemorrhoidectomy by using the technique described by Milligan and Morgan, published in Lancet journal in 1937. The hemorrhoid samples were stained with hematoxylin–eosin for the histologic study to confirm the hemorrhoidal tissue diagnosis. The picrosirius red staining protocol was used after the histologic analysis. The method used for image processing is described in the text. Images were imported to the Image Tool for Windows software. The same process was used on the embryonic tissue. Data resulting from the analysis of images were processed using STATISTICA, a software for statistical analysis.
Results When compared, it was found that the two tissues presented very different values, with hemorrhoids containing the highest type III collagen values.
Conclusion Our results seem to imply that hemorrhoids have a larger proportion of type III collagen than fetal tissue. They also suggest a possible age-related deterioration of the tissue.
In this study, we describe, compare, and discuss several subcellular alterations found in Colorectal Adenocarcinoma and peritumoral tissue using transmission electron microscopy, morphometry, and statistical analysis. Tissue samples from anterior resections were collected from patients diagnosed with Colorectal Adenocarcinoma in the University Hospital of Caracas. Samples were processed according to the typical protocol for their observation through transmission electron microscopy. The resulting images were analyzed using specialized software for the collection of morphometric data. Several anomalies were common for both tissues, including but not limited to, rough endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrial swelling, nuclear invagination, nuclear enlargement, and cellular swelling. In general, alterations within the tumor were more frequent and intense. Extensive organellar degradation and other evidences of cellular damage seemed to extend past the edge of the tumor into the peritumoral tissue. There seems to be a clear process of lateral cancerization present in the peritumoral area. The tissue layers composed of smooth muscle cells, probably due to their structural features, may allow greater diffusion of harmful substances produced by the tumor. A more in-depth analysis of peritumoral tissue considering organellar damage and morphometric data may provide relevant insight about the changing microenvironment promoted by the close proximity of a tumor.
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