cefoxitin and Metaplasia

cefoxitin has been researched along with Metaplasia* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for cefoxitin and Metaplasia

ArticleYear
Different expression of Tn and sialyl-Tn antigens between normal and diseased human gastric epithelial cells.
    Acta medica Okayama, 1998, Volume: 52, Issue:4

    Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen (T antigen) has been supposed to be a cancer-specific carbohydrate antigen. We have previously shown that one third of the Japanese population normally expressed T antigen in gastric surface epithelia and the other two thirds expressed fucosyl-T antigen. Their sialylation and blocked-synthesis were associated with diseased conditions. In the present study, we studied gastric surface epithelial expression of monosaccharide antigen Tn, i.e., a precursor of T antigen, and sialyl-Tn. Normal fundic and pyloric epithelia, respectively, expressed Tn supranucleally and cytoplasmically, but did not express sialyl-Tn. In the intestinal metaplasias and intestinal-type adenomas, goblet cells expressed sialyl-Tn in their vacuoles, and absorptive cells expressed Tn apically. In gastric-type adenomas, Tn, but not sialyl-Tn, was detected. Intestinal-type cancers expressed Tn and sialyl-Tn more often than the diffuse-type cancers. Five cancers did not express Tn, sialyl-Tn, or the T-related antigens. In these, four were diffuse-type cancers. We concluded that: a) normal gastric epithelial cells express Tn; b) metaplastic differentiation is associated with sialylation of Tn and c) expression of Tn and sialyl-Tn is depressed in the gastric cancers.

    Topics: Adenoma; Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate; Epithelial Cells; Gastrointestinal Diseases; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Intestines; Metaplasia; Reference Values; Stomach; Stomach Neoplasms

1998
T (Thomsen-Friedenreich) antigen and other simple mucin-type carbohydrate antigens in precursor lesions of gastric carcinoma.
    Histopathology, 1994, Volume: 24, Issue:2

    In a previous report we suggested that T antigen appeared to be associated with gastric carcinoma. To verify this hypothesis and characterize the pattern of expression of simple-mucin type carbohydrate antigens (Tn,sialyl-Tn and T before and after neuraminidase) in normal gastric mucosa and precursor lesions of gastric carcinoma, we studied the mucosa adjacent to 100 cases of gastric carcinoma, gastric biopsies of 60 dyspeptic patients, eight adenomatous polyps and eight hyperplastic polyps. The expression of the antigens was more related to the cell type and underlying lesions than to the coexistence of carcinoma. The most distinctive findings concerned intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia and hyperplastic lesions. In intestinal metaplasia, Tn was found mostly in columnar cells and sialyl-Tn in goblet cells. T was more prevalent in incomplete intestinal metaplasia than in complete. A high prevalence of sialyl-Tn expression and cell membrane immunoreactivity for T antigen, similar to those previously found in gastric carcinomas, were observed in three adenomatous polyps, one hyperplastic polyp, five cases of adenomatous dysplasia in the neighbourhood of intestinal carcinomas and four cases of marked foveolar hyperplasia, three of which were from the mucosa adjacent to diffuse carcinomas. We conclude that adenomatous and hyperplastic lesions share with gastric carcinomas features of aberrant glycosylation, namely the cell membrane expression of T antigen.

    Topics: Adenocarcinoma; Adenomatous Polyps; Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate; Carbohydrate Sequence; Dyspepsia; Gastric Mucosa; Gastritis; Gastritis, Atrophic; Glycosylation; Humans; Hyperplasia; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Metaplasia; Molecular Sequence Data; Polyps; Precancerous Conditions; Stomach Neoplasms

1994