A 60-year-old bisexual male was referred to our institution for management of an unresectable squamous-cell carcinoma of the pelvis arising in a giant condyloma acuminatum. He received neoadjuvant chemoradiation consisting of 5-fluorouracil and mitomycin C with concurrent external beam radiation, followed by posterior pelvic exenteration. The surgical specimen had no residual cancer. In situ hybridization was performed using a human papilloma virus omniprobe for human papilloma virus subtypes 6, 11, 16, 18, 31, 33, and 35. Two years after diagnosis the patient is doing well with no evidence of recurrent disease.
Successive coagulation studies were performed in 34 adult patients hospitalized for treatment of acute bacterial infection. Increased fibrinogen, factor‐VIII activity, and platelets were found in more than 50% of the patients studied. Classical disseminated intravascular coagulation occurred in three cases. Nine patients had elevated fibrin split products in various combinations with transient hypofibrinogenaemia, thrombocytopenia, and reduced factor‐V activity. The appearance of elevated fibrin split products together with transient hypofibrinogenaemia, thrombocytopenia, and reduced factor‐V activity in some patients may reflect the presence of subclinical disseminated intravascular coagulation.
Plasma coagulation factors, adenosine diphosphate-induced platelet aggregation, and fibrinolytic activity were studied in male survivors of myocardial infarction and in healthy normal men. Infarction survivors had significant elevations of factors VIII and X and of adenosine diphosphate-induced platelet aggregation. The fibrinolytic system was altered toward reduced plasminogen activation, increased antiurokinase activity, and elevated antiplasmin activity. These findings suggest that some men with prior myocardial infarction have a heightened tendency to thrombogenesis. This tendency may represent a response to previous cardiac insult or may contribute to its pathogenesis.
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