Rationale:Primary squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the stomach is a rare disease. The pathogenesis and prognosis of advanced SCC remains to be elucidated. The aim of the current study was to investigate the prognosis of recurrent or metastatic SCC of the stomach.Patient concerns:A retrospective study examined the clinical characteristics and survival outcomes of 14 patients diagnosed with recurrent or metastatic SCC of the stomach, including 7 patients followed up in the hospital and 7 patients selected from the PubMed and Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) database with meta-analysis between January 2003 and January 2016.Diagnoses:All patients meet the following diagnoses criteria: histological diagnosis of gastric squamous cell carcinoma; the tumor must not be located in the cardia area or extend into the esophagus; presence of local relapse or distant metastases of gastric SCC in computed tomography (CT) images; and no evidence of secondary SCC in the body. Clinical pathological data and follow-up data were obtained from the medical record or case report of each patient.Interventions:Palliative chemotherapy was administered in 14 patients diagnosed with recurrent or metastatic gastric SCC.Outcomes:The median age of 14 patients (10 males and 4 females) was 61 years old (range, 28–76). In total, 57% (8/14 cases) of tumors were located on the lesser curvature side of the stomach and 64% (9/14 cases) of metastatic sites were identified in the liver. All patients received systemic chemotherapy, and their median survival was 7.0 months (range, 2.0–22.3 months).Lessons:The median survival of patients with advanced gastric SCC was shorter than the median survival (11 months) of advanced gastric adenocarcinoma, suggesting that advanced gastric SCC may have a poorer prognosis compared with adenocarcinoma of the stomach in recurrent or metastatic stage.
Purpose Deficits in facial emotional intensity recognition have been associated with social cognition in patients with major depression. The study examined multiple event-related potential (ERP) components in patients with major depression and investigated the relationships between ERPs, social cognition, and clinical features. Participants and Methods Thirty-one patients met DSM-IV diagnosis of depression and 31 healthy participants completed the emotion intensity recognition task (EIRT), while ERPs were recorded. Data on ERP components (P100, N170, P200, and P300) were analyzed. Results The behavioral results showed that patients with major depression performed worse on EIRT, including all six categories of emotions (sadness, disgust, happiness, surprise, anger, and fear), compared to healthy participants. The ERP results showed that patients with major depression exhibited higher P100 amplitudes for sad and happy faces than healthy participants; P300 amplitudes induced by sad and surprise faces were also higher than in healthy participants, mainly in the central and temporal lobes. A positive correlation was found between sadness intensity scores and P100 amplitudes in patients with major depression. Conclusion Patients with major depression are biased in their identification of facial expressions indicating emotional intensity. Specifically, they have emotional biases in the early and late stages of cognitive processing, mainly in the form of sensitivity to sad stimuli. It may lead to a persistent rumination of sadness that is detrimental to the remission of depression. Additionally, patients with major depression devote different amounts of cognitive resources for different intensities of sad faces during the preconscious stage of cognitive processing. The more intense their perception of sadness, the more cognitive resources they devote. Therefore, the assessment of the intensity of facial expressions is an important research topic, with clinical implications on social cognitive function in patients with major depression.
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