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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Prognostic factors for squamous cell cervical cancer : tumor markers, hormones, smoking, and S-phase fraction

Lindström, Annika January 2010 (has links)
Cervical cancer is the second most common malignancy in women worldwide and one of the leading causes of cancer mortality globally. In patients with invasive cervical cancer prognostic factors are of value for the choice of treatment, monitoring of treatment and follow-up. The most important clinical prognostic factors are stage, tumor volume, parametrial infiltration, vascular invasion, lymph node metastases, and distant metastases. An improved estimation of the prognosis of cervical cancer is desirable, especially in early cancer stages. The aim of this research was to study possible associations between tumor markers, female sex steroids, smoking, S-phase fraction (SPF), and prognosis in invasive squamous cell cervical cancer (SCC). The study comprised 190 patients with SCC, stages IB-IV, admitted to the Department of Gynecologic Oncology at Norrland University Hospital in Umeå between September 1984 and October1990. Ten year mortality was estimated. In study I, of a total of 103 patients, it was found that increased tumor growth, measured by the DNA SPF, was associated with elevated serum progesterone and smoking in the premenopasual patients and with aneuploidy in the whole group. In study II, comprising 128 patients, survival length related to hormone levels and SPF was evaluated in women who died of cervical cancer. In both pre- and postmenopausal women, who died of cervical cancer, SPF at or above 12% was correlated with reduced survival. There was significant positive correlation between a low serum estradiol/progesterone ratio and short survival in those premenopausal women who died of cancer (p=0.02). In study III, ten-year follow-up results in 128 women were compared with the expression of ten relevant tumor markers, assessed by immunohistochemistry. The overall ten-year survival rate in patients with low COX-2 and high CD4+ expression was 76%, versus 53% in the remaining women. The survival rate with absent p53 and high COX-2 expression in the tumors was 42%, versus 71%, while the corresponding figure for the combination of high COX-2 intensity and expression of c-myc was 27%, versus 62%. None of the single markers correlated significantly with outcome in the final Cox regression analyses, while five combinations did. Study IV addressed possible associations between selected tumor markers and cofactors in SCC. Ten tumor markers were examined in 128 patients. Smoking habits and previous oral contraceptive use were recorded. Serum estradiol and progesterone levels were evaluated in 80 women. Highly significant associations were found between strong c-myc staining and increased progesterone, low EGFR staining and high serum estradiol, and absence of p53 staining and smoking. There was an association between absence of p53 and high serum progesterone. In study V, LRIG1 expression was studied in 128 patients and was compared with expression of nine other tumor markers, smoking history, hormone levels, and prognosis. LRIG1 appears to be a significant prognostic predictor in early stage SCC, independent of the other tumor markers that were studied.  Diminished expression in advanced cancer stages and the inverse correlation to serum progesterone and smoking indicate that LRIG1 is a tumor suppressor in squamous cell cervical cancer. Conclusion: The results of these studies support a role of progesterone as a promoter of cervical cancer and indicate that smoking is associated with tumor progression. A combination of tumor markers might be of help in prognostic prediction. LRIG1 acts as a tumor suppressor. These findings might contribute towards greater understanding of prognostic prediction of squamous cell cervical cancer.
12

Effects of sex steroid hormones on the neurovascular unit in the mouse hypothalamus / Effets des hormones stéroïdes sexuelles sur l'unité neurovasculaire dans l'hypothalamus de souris

Atallah-Ibrahim, Afnan 07 July 2016 (has links)
L’intégrité fonctionnelle de la barrière hémato-encéphalique (BHE) est altérée dans de nombreuses pathologies neurologiques et métaboliques. Les vaisseaux cérébraux sont des tissus cibles des hormones stéroïdes sexuelles mais la contribution respective de ces effecteurs endocriniens et de leurs récepteurs dans l’intégrité de la BHE reste encore à être précisée. Les effets des hormones gonadiques sur l’unité neurovasculaire chez la souris ont été étudiés, en se concentrant sur l’aire préoptique médiane de l’hypothalamus, une région cérébrale hormono-sensible. L’augmentation de la perméabilité de la BHE chez des souris mâles et femelles gonadectomisés. Elle est associée chez le mâle à une désorganisation des jonctions serrées et une diminution de l’expression des protéines les constituant, à une activation des cellules gliales, et à une augmentation de l’expression de molécules inflammatoires, la supplémentation en testostérone permettant la restoration. Les récepteurs des androgènes et des estrogènes peuvent ainsi être impliqués dans la régulation hormono-dépendante du transport paracellulaire. La lignée de souris transgéniques sélectivement invalidées pour le récepteur neural des androgènes, a permis de mettre en évidence l’effet délétère de l’absence de ce récepteur sur l’intégrité de la BHE et des jonctions serrées. Pour compléter, un modèle ex vivo de tranches d’hypothalamus a permis d’appréhender les effets à court terme de la testostérone sur la BHE. Ces données soulèvent des questions sur les effets délétères potentiels des perturbateurs endo-criniens sur l'intégrité BBB et l'apparition de maladies neurologiques et métaboliques associées. / Functional integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is compromised in many neurological and metabolic pathologies. Cerebral blood vessels are target tissue for sex steroid hormones but the relative contribution of these endocrine effectors and their receptors in the BBB integrity are still unclear. Effects of gonadal hormones on the mouse neurovascular unit were studied, focusing on the hypothalamic medial preoptic area, a highly sensitive brain area to gonadal steroid hormones. BBB permeability increased in both gonactectomized male and female, is associated with tight junction disorganization and lower expression of tight junction proteins, glial activation, and up-regulation of inflammatory molecules in male. Testosterone supplementation restores the BBB impermeability, tight junction integrity, and almost completely abrogated the inflammatory features. Androgen and estrogen receptor may be involved in testosterone-induced regulation of the formation and maintenance of tight junction in males. Studying the involvement of these receptors using a trans-genic mice line selectively lacking neural AR in the CNS, highlighted the negative effect of this dele-tion on the BBB and TJ integrity. To complete, ex vivo slices of male mouse hypothalamus allowed to assess short-term molecular mechanisms of testosterone on the BBB structure and function.These data raise questions about the potential deleterious effects of endocrine disruptors on the BBB integrity and the occurrence of neurological and metabolic diseases.
13

Étude sur l’oxygénation des lits capillaires du disque optique au cours du cycle menstruel chez les femmes

Hilal, Jessy 12 1900 (has links)
Il est connu qu’on retrouve chez les femmes en post-ménopause un risque plus important de développer des maladies oculaires comparativement aux hommes du même groupe d’âge. Il semble que les changements hormonaux, et en particulier la baisse importante des niveaux d’estradiol, secondaires à la sénescence folliculaire constituent un facteur étiologique à long terme. Cela étant, il est légitime de se demander si les variations des niveaux d’hormones sexuelles endogènes peuvent également occasionner des effets à court terme sur les tissus de l’œil. Cette interrogation constitue d’ailleurs le motif principal de l’élaboration de la présente étude. Sachant qu’il se produit chez les femmes non ménopausées des variations continuelles des niveaux d’hormones sexuelles stéroïdiennes au cours de leur cycle menstruel, des femmes en âge de procréer ont été recrutées comme sujets d’étude. Dans un deuxième temps, afin de trouver le paramètre d’intérêt, on a effectué une revue de la documentation scientifique qui révèle un fait bien établi : les estrogènes favorisent la vasodilatation des vaisseaux sanguins par l’intermédiaire du monoxyde d’azote, et permettent, par le fait même, l’accroissement du débit sanguin tissulaire. Or, comment mesurer des variations de débit sanguin dans des tissus oculaires? Comme il est expliqué dans la discussion du présent mémoire, les variations d’oxygénation dans un organe dont le métabolisme est relativement stable sont le reflet de variations de débit sanguin. Grâce à une technique de mesure basée sur la spectroréflectométrie, il est possible de mesurer le taux d’oxyhémoglobine (HbO2) des lits capillaires du disque optique. En observant les variations du taux d’oxyhémoglobine au cours du cycle menstruel chez les sujets, on peut ainsi mesurer l’effet des variations hormonales cycliques sur l’irrigation des tissus oculaires. En somme, l’objectif de cette recherche est de mieux comprendre, en suivant le cycle menstruel des femmes, l’effet des hormones sexuelles endogènes sur l’oxygénation des lits capillaires du disque optique. Étant à la base du métabolisme de l’œil, l’apport en oxygène et en divers substrat véhiculés par la circulation sanguine est important au maintien de la santé oculaire. L’éclaircissement du lien entre les hormones et l’oxygénation de la rétine constituerait un avancement important, puisqu’il permettrait de comprendre pourquoi certaines atteintes oculaires, comme la cécité, touchent davantage les femmes. Les résultats de cette étude ont démontré que le taux d’oxyhémoglobine mesuré dans les lits capillaires du disque optique de l’œil ne subit pratiquement pas de variations significatives durant le cycle menstruel lorsqu’on considère les incertitudes des valeurs mesurées. Également, on observe une variabilité similaire des taux d’oxyhémoglobine mesurés chez les femmes en âge de procréation et chez les hommes du même groupe d’âge. Cela suggère que les changements hormonaux cycliques, qui ne se produisent que chez les femmes, n’occasionnent probablement pas de variation significative mesurable du taux d’oxyhémoglobine. Bref, malgré les effets possibles des estrogènes sur le diamètre artériolaire, il semble que les mécanismes locaux de régulation du débit sanguin tissulaire maintiennent un état d’équilibre propre au tissu irrigué et adapté aux besoins métaboliques locaux. / Postmenopausal women, when compared to men from the same age group, are more prone to develop ocular disease. It is thought that long term hormonal changes caused by ovarian senescence, and especially the drop in estradiol, are the etiological mechanism by which this phenomenon occurs. Whether variations in the levels of endogenous sexual hormones can produce short term effects in the tissues of the eye is less understood and, therefore, constitutes the main reason for carrying out the present study. Given that non menopausal women have repeated short term changes in the levels of sex steroid hormones during their menstrual cycle, we have recruited such women as study subjects. We also reviewed the scientific literature to establish what would be the parameter of interest and found a well characterised phenomenon: estrogens promote vasodilation by increasing nitrogen oxide production and thus promote a rise in blood flow. As to measuring variations in blood flow within the eye, it was explained in the discussion of the present memoir that changes in the oxygenation of an organ with a constant metabolism are induced by changes in the blood flow irrigating that organ. Using a method based on spectroreflectometry, it is possible to measure oxyhaemoglobin levels (HbO2) in the capillaries of the optic disc. By studying the variation of the HbO2 levels during the menstrual cycle, we can appreciate the effect of the cyclic hormonal changes on the ocular blood flow. The supply in oxygen and nutrients brought to an organ by its blood flow is essential for its metabolism. Therefore, the discovery of a correlation between sex hormone levels and the oxygenation of the retina would prove to be an important step towards understanding the higher frequency of certain ocular diseases in postmenopausal women, as compared to men of the same age group. The results of our study show that HbO2 levels in the capillary beds of the optic disc do not undergo statistically significant variations during the menstrual cycle. The same results were found, during a similar observational period, for male subjects used in the study as controls. These results suggest that cyclic variations in the levels of sex hormones, which occur only in nonmenaopausal women, do not induce significant changes in the oxygenation of the optic disc. In short, despite the possible effect of estrogens on the arteriolar diameter, it seems that local regulatory mechanisms of the blood flow maintain a tissue in a state of equilibrium that is adapted to its specific metabolic demand.
14

Endogenous hormones in the etiology of ovarian and endometrial cancers

Lukanova, Annekatrin January 2004 (has links)
The main purpose of this thesis was to examine the relationship of pre-diagnostic circulating levels of sex-steroids (androgens and estrogens), sex hormone binding globuline (SHBG), insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), IGF binding proteins (BP) and C-peptide (as a marker of pancreatic insulin secretion) with risk of ovarian and endometrial cancer. Additionally, the interrelationships of body mass index (BMI), sex-steroids, IGF-I and IGFBP-3 were examined. Two case-control studies were nested within 3 prospective cohort studies centered in New York (USA), Umeå (Sweden) and Milan (Italy). The ovarian study included 132 cancer cases. The endometrial study included 166 cancer cases in the IGF-I and C-peptide component and 124 postmenopausal cases in the sex-steroids component. For each case, two controls matching the case for cohort, age, menopausal status and date at recruitment were selected. In total 286 and 315 controls were included in the ovarian and endometrial cancer studies, respectively. Odds ratios (OR) and their 95% confidence intervals (CI) for cancer risk associated with increasing hormone concentrations were estimated by conditional logistic regression. The cross-sectional analysis was based on anthropometric and hormonal data from 620 controls selected for the two nested case-control studies. There was no association of prediagnostic androstenedione, testosterone, DHEAS, SHBG or estrone with ovarian cancer risk in the whole study population or in women who were pre- or postmenopausal at blood donation. In the premenopausal group, risk appeared to increase with increasing androstenedione (OR (95% CI) for the highest tertile: 2.35 (0.81-6.82), p=0.12). There was no association of IGF-I, IGFBP-1, 2, 3 or C-peptide concentrations with risk of ovarian cancer risk in the study group as a whole. In analyses restricted to subjects who had developed ovarian cancer at an early age (<55), circulating IGF-I was directly and strongly associated with risk (OR (95% CI): 4.74 (1.20-18.7), p<0.05 for the highest IGF-I tertile). In the endometrial study, previous observations were confimed that elevated circulating estrogens and androgens and decreased SHBG increase risk of developing endometrial malignancy after menopause. Multivariate ORs (95% CI) for endometrial cancer for quartiles with the highest hormone levels were: 4.13 (1.76-9.72), p<0.001 for estradiol; 3.67 (1.71-7.88), p=0.001 for estrone; 2.15 (1.05-4.40), p<0.04 for androstenedione; 1.74 (0.88-3.46), p=0.06 for testosterone; 2.90 (1.42-5.90), p<0.01 for DHEAS and 0.46 (0.20-1.05), p<0.01 for SHBG. Prediagnostic IGF-I, IGFBP-1, -2 and –3 were not related to risk of endometrial cancer in the whole study population. In postmenopausal women, levels of IGFBP-1 were inversely related to risk with an OR for the highest quartile of 0.36 (0.13-0.95), p<0.05. Endometrial cancer risk increased with increasing levels of C-peptide (p<0.01), up to an OR of 4.40 (1.65-11.7) for the highest quintile after adjustment for BMI and other confounders. The cross-sectional analyses showed that in both pre- and postmenopausal women SHBG decreased with increasing BMI. In the postmenopausal group, estrogens, testosterone and androstenedione increased with BMI, while the association with IGF-I was non-linear, the highest mean IGF-I concentration being observed in women with BMI between 24 and 25. In postmenopausal women, IGF-I was positively related to androgens, inversely correlated with SHBG, and was not correlated with estrogens. In conclusion, elevated pre-diagnostic sex-steroids, IGF-I or C-peptide increase risk of developing ovarian and endometrial cancer. BMI influences the circulating levels of these hormones, especially after menopause.
15

Étude sur l’oxygénation des lits capillaires du disque optique au cours du cycle menstruel chez les femmes

Hilal, Jessy 12 1900 (has links)
Il est connu qu’on retrouve chez les femmes en post-ménopause un risque plus important de développer des maladies oculaires comparativement aux hommes du même groupe d’âge. Il semble que les changements hormonaux, et en particulier la baisse importante des niveaux d’estradiol, secondaires à la sénescence folliculaire constituent un facteur étiologique à long terme. Cela étant, il est légitime de se demander si les variations des niveaux d’hormones sexuelles endogènes peuvent également occasionner des effets à court terme sur les tissus de l’œil. Cette interrogation constitue d’ailleurs le motif principal de l’élaboration de la présente étude. Sachant qu’il se produit chez les femmes non ménopausées des variations continuelles des niveaux d’hormones sexuelles stéroïdiennes au cours de leur cycle menstruel, des femmes en âge de procréer ont été recrutées comme sujets d’étude. Dans un deuxième temps, afin de trouver le paramètre d’intérêt, on a effectué une revue de la documentation scientifique qui révèle un fait bien établi : les estrogènes favorisent la vasodilatation des vaisseaux sanguins par l’intermédiaire du monoxyde d’azote, et permettent, par le fait même, l’accroissement du débit sanguin tissulaire. Or, comment mesurer des variations de débit sanguin dans des tissus oculaires? Comme il est expliqué dans la discussion du présent mémoire, les variations d’oxygénation dans un organe dont le métabolisme est relativement stable sont le reflet de variations de débit sanguin. Grâce à une technique de mesure basée sur la spectroréflectométrie, il est possible de mesurer le taux d’oxyhémoglobine (HbO2) des lits capillaires du disque optique. En observant les variations du taux d’oxyhémoglobine au cours du cycle menstruel chez les sujets, on peut ainsi mesurer l’effet des variations hormonales cycliques sur l’irrigation des tissus oculaires. En somme, l’objectif de cette recherche est de mieux comprendre, en suivant le cycle menstruel des femmes, l’effet des hormones sexuelles endogènes sur l’oxygénation des lits capillaires du disque optique. Étant à la base du métabolisme de l’œil, l’apport en oxygène et en divers substrat véhiculés par la circulation sanguine est important au maintien de la santé oculaire. L’éclaircissement du lien entre les hormones et l’oxygénation de la rétine constituerait un avancement important, puisqu’il permettrait de comprendre pourquoi certaines atteintes oculaires, comme la cécité, touchent davantage les femmes. Les résultats de cette étude ont démontré que le taux d’oxyhémoglobine mesuré dans les lits capillaires du disque optique de l’œil ne subit pratiquement pas de variations significatives durant le cycle menstruel lorsqu’on considère les incertitudes des valeurs mesurées. Également, on observe une variabilité similaire des taux d’oxyhémoglobine mesurés chez les femmes en âge de procréation et chez les hommes du même groupe d’âge. Cela suggère que les changements hormonaux cycliques, qui ne se produisent que chez les femmes, n’occasionnent probablement pas de variation significative mesurable du taux d’oxyhémoglobine. Bref, malgré les effets possibles des estrogènes sur le diamètre artériolaire, il semble que les mécanismes locaux de régulation du débit sanguin tissulaire maintiennent un état d’équilibre propre au tissu irrigué et adapté aux besoins métaboliques locaux. / Postmenopausal women, when compared to men from the same age group, are more prone to develop ocular disease. It is thought that long term hormonal changes caused by ovarian senescence, and especially the drop in estradiol, are the etiological mechanism by which this phenomenon occurs. Whether variations in the levels of endogenous sexual hormones can produce short term effects in the tissues of the eye is less understood and, therefore, constitutes the main reason for carrying out the present study. Given that non menopausal women have repeated short term changes in the levels of sex steroid hormones during their menstrual cycle, we have recruited such women as study subjects. We also reviewed the scientific literature to establish what would be the parameter of interest and found a well characterised phenomenon: estrogens promote vasodilation by increasing nitrogen oxide production and thus promote a rise in blood flow. As to measuring variations in blood flow within the eye, it was explained in the discussion of the present memoir that changes in the oxygenation of an organ with a constant metabolism are induced by changes in the blood flow irrigating that organ. Using a method based on spectroreflectometry, it is possible to measure oxyhaemoglobin levels (HbO2) in the capillaries of the optic disc. By studying the variation of the HbO2 levels during the menstrual cycle, we can appreciate the effect of the cyclic hormonal changes on the ocular blood flow. The supply in oxygen and nutrients brought to an organ by its blood flow is essential for its metabolism. Therefore, the discovery of a correlation between sex hormone levels and the oxygenation of the retina would prove to be an important step towards understanding the higher frequency of certain ocular diseases in postmenopausal women, as compared to men of the same age group. The results of our study show that HbO2 levels in the capillary beds of the optic disc do not undergo statistically significant variations during the menstrual cycle. The same results were found, during a similar observational period, for male subjects used in the study as controls. These results suggest that cyclic variations in the levels of sex hormones, which occur only in nonmenaopausal women, do not induce significant changes in the oxygenation of the optic disc. In short, despite the possible effect of estrogens on the arteriolar diameter, it seems that local regulatory mechanisms of the blood flow maintain a tissue in a state of equilibrium that is adapted to its specific metabolic demand.
16

Prognostic factors for squamous cell cervical cancer tumor markers, hormones, smoking, and S-phase fraction /

Lindström, Annika, January 2010 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Umeå : Umeå universitet, 2010.

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