Nasal provocation tests were performed on nine atopic and 15 nonatopic subjects in order to assess the sources of protein in histamine-induced secretions and to examine the bilateral secretory response to unilaterally applied topical histamine (the nasonasal reflex). Nasal lavages were assayed for the following proteins: albumin, total protein, secretory IgA (sIgA), nonsecretory IgA (serum IgA), and total IgA. Histamine stimulation produced a profound ipsilateral protein secretion enriched in the serum proteins albumin and nonsecretory IgA. Histamine also produced a smaller contralateral protein secretion (about 15% as large as the ipsilateral response) which contained disproportionately elevated concentrations of the glandular protein sIgA. Topical pretreatment with chlorpheniramine (an H-1 antihistamine) completely abrogated the ipsilateral nasal secretory response to histamine. Nasal pretreatment with atropine (a muscarinic antagonist) had no significant effect on ipsilateral nasal secretion and did not alter the capacity of histamine to stimulate contralateral secretions (the nasonasal reflex). Histamine therefore stimulates secretion by both a direct action that increases plasma protein extravasation and by an indirect reflex mechanism that stimulates glandular secretion.
There is a statistically significant difference between the 5-year disease-free survival for the esthesioneuroblastoma patients and the non-esthesioneuroblastoma patients (90% vs 59.1%; p = 0.028), and aggressive salvage therapy appears to be a more successful option in the esthesioneuroblastoma group of patients.
Carcinomas originating in the retromolar trigone (RMT) are uncommon and characterized by early spread. Determination of mandibular invasion is significant for planning therapy and determining prognosis. For oral cavity cancers in general, CT is reasonably accurate in assessing bone invasion. However, there is a paucity of information specifically addressing the value of CT in the RMT. In this study, the records of patients with biopsy-proven RMT carcinomas treated between 1984 and 1998 were reviewed with attention to preoperative CT scans and histopathologic findings during surgery. Half of the patients who were treated with primary resection had mandibular invasion. Bone invasion was not identified radiographically in 27% of patients with preoperative CT scans. The sensitivity of CT for bone involvement in RMT cancers was 50%, with a negative predictive value of 61.1%. The positive predictive value was 91.1%. These findings suggest that CT is a useful, but potentially inaccurate, predictor of bone invasion in the RMT.
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