Hot spring water and natural mineral water have been therapeutically used to prevent or improve various diseases. Specifically, consumption of bicarbonate-rich mineral water (BMW) has been reported to prevent or improve type 2 diabetes (T2D) in humans. However, the molecular mechanisms of the beneficial effects behind mineral water consumption remain unclear. To elucidate the molecular level effects of BMW consumption on glycemic control, blood metabolome analysis and fecal microbiome analysis were applied to the BMW consumption test. During the study, 19 healthy volunteers drank 500 mL of commercially available tap water (TW) or BMW daily. TW consumption periods and BMW consumption periods lasted for a week each and this cycle was repeated twice. Biochemical tests indicated that serum glycoalbumin levels, one of the indexes of glycemic controls, decreased significantly after BMW consumption. Metabolome analysis of blood samples revealed that 19 metabolites including glycolysis-related metabolites and 3 amino acids were significantly different between TW and BMW consumption periods. Additionally, microbiome analysis demonstrated that composition of lean-inducible bacteria was increased after BMW consumption. Our results suggested that consumption of BMW has the possible potential to prevent and/or improve T2D through the alterations of host metabolism and gut microbiota composition.
Gastrinomas mainly occur in the duodenum and pancreas. Primary hepatic gastrinoma is rare and difficult to diagnose because the liver is a frequent site of metastatic gastrinomas. Clinical factors were assessed in a 28-year-old man with diarrhea and heartburn who was hospitalized for recurrent duodenal ulcers. Abdominal ultrasound, endoscopic ultrasound and computed tomography (CT) could not detect a tumor in the duodenum or pancreas. His gastrin level was 846 pg/mL and magnetic resonance imaging showed a mass 12 mm in diameter in the right robe of the liver. A selective intra-arterial calcium injection (SACI) test and 68-gallium edotreotide positron emission tomography CT (Ga-DOTATOC PET-CT) were therefore performed. Calcium gluconate injection into the proper hepatic artery resulted in a marked increase in serum gastrin concentration in the right hepatic vein, with Ga-DOTATOC PET-CT showing uptake only by the liver mass. Following a diagnosis of primary hepatic gastrinoma, the tumor was resected. A histopathological examination indicated gastrinoma. Six months postoperatively, he has no symptoms, is not taking proton-pump inhibitors and his gastrin level remains within the normal range. The SACI test and the clinical course of this patient strongly suggest that the tumor was a primary hepatic gastrinoma. The SACI test is helpful in the diagnosis of primary hepatic gastrinoma.
SUMMARY
BackgroundRadiofrequency ablation (RFA) therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma has enabled good local control to be possible. However, after successful local control, distant recurrences frequently occur in the remnant liver.
Objectives/Hypothesis
To evaluate the usefulness of fused positron emission tomography (PET)/magnetic resonance (MR) images for surgical planning in patients with oral/oropharyngeal cancer and suspected mandibular invasion.
Study Design
Individual cohort study.
Methods
Eleven of 17 patients with suspected mandibular invasion of squamous cell carcinoma of the lower gingiva, oropharynx, and buccal mucosa who underwent 18F‐fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/computed tomography (CT) and contrast‐enhanced MR imaging (MRI) and had fused PET/MR images were enrolled in this study. The area for surgical resection was determined based on the fused images. The usefulness of these images was confirmed by comparing them with the histopathologic findings in the resected tumors.
Results
Histopathologic evaluation of the surgical specimens revealed that nine of the 11 patients had invasion into the mandible and/or medial pterygoid muscle. All patients had a negative surgical margin. The sensitivity and specificity for detection of mandibular/medial pterygoid muscle invasion was 100%/40% and 83%/100% by fused PET/MRI, respectively, and 100%/20% and 100%/60% by PET/CT, respectively. Interobserver reproducibility between two radiologists/nuclear medicine physicians and two head and neck surgeons showed that the only statistically significant κ values were for PET/MRI.
Conclusions
PET/MRI can be easily understood by head and neck surgeons, who are not diagnostic imaging professionals, and can be used when planning the area to be surgically resected in patients with oral/oropharyngeal cancer and clinically suspected mandibular invasion. Considering the expense of a hybrid PET/MRI system, creation of a fused PET/MR image would provide a reasonable and reliable tool for clinical use in these patients.
Level of Evidence
2b Laryngoscope, 130:367–374, 2020
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