Phototherapy, including photodynamic therapy and photothermal therapy, has the potential to treat several types of cancer.
Objectives/Hypothesis: Despite the dramatic decrease in the incidence of laryngeal tuberculosis, the disease has gained new interest as a result of claims that it has changed its clinical patterns. The aim of this study is to evaluate the changing trends in clinical manifestations of laryngeal tuberculosis. Study Design: Retrospective clinical analysis. Methods: Clinical analysis of 22 patients with pathologically confirmed laryngeal tuberculosis was carried out retrospectively. Results: Patients' ages ranged from 22 to 75 years. The male-to-female ratio was 2.14 to 1. The most frequent chief complaint was hoarseness. The true vocal cord and the false vocal cord were commonly involved, and 11 patients showed single lesions. Among 22 patients, only 7 had active pulmonary tuberculosis, and 9 were proven to have normal lung status. The patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis showed more ulcerative and multiple lesions. The patients with normal lung status showed nonspecific, polypoid, and single lesions. All patients responded satisfactorily to antituberculous medication. Conclusions:The clinical manifestations of laryngeal tuberculosis have changed and seem to be different from those of classic reports. It can even occur without pulmonary tuberculosis, and the characteristics of lesions seem to be more nonspecific. It might be important to consider tuberculosis in the differential diagnosis of nonspecific laryngeal disease.
Recent studies have suggested that Skp2, an SCFtype ubiquitin ligase, positively regulates cell cycle through degradation of p27, which is an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2), which drives cells from the G1 to S phase of cell cycles. In the present study, we examined key regulatory proteins involved in serum starvation-induced cell cycle arrest in human ovarian cancer cells, SK-OV-3. Cell cycle analysis showed that cells were arrested at the G1 phase after serum starvation. Western blot analysis showed that the protein levels of CDK4 and CDK2 were significantly decreased in SK-OV-3 cells. Consistently, Roscovitine, an inhibitor of CDK2, induced cell cycle arrest in normally proliferating cells and a chemical inhibitor of CDK4, 3-ATA [3-Amino-9-thio(10H)-acridone], was found to induce growth arrest. We also found that the protein level of Skp2 was dramatically decreased in response to serum starvation. Moreover, CDK2 protein, which allows cell cycle transit from the G1 to the S phase, was decreased when the Skp2 expression was inhibited by specific siRNA of Skp2, but CDK4 was not decreased. Therefore, these results suggest that serum starvation induces G1 arrest through suppression of Skp2-dependent CDK2 activity and Skp2-independent CDK4 activity in human SK-OV-3 ovarian cancer cells.
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