Aims.
Aims. Local recurrence remains a challenging and common problem following curettage and joint-sparing surgery for
Aims. The present study investigated receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-Β ligand (RANKL), osteoprotegerin (OPG), and Runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2) gene expressions in
Aims.
AIM. To present our experience in patients treated under primary diagnosis
Because of the lack of a suitable in vivo model for
Aims. The aim of this paper was to investigate the prognostic factors for local recurrence in patients with pathological fracture through
Introduction:
Objectives: Development a giant cell tumor model arising from the mutated mesenchymal cells present in its stroma. This establishes the pathogenic mechanism of giant cell tumor, and allows the evaluation of the possible role of biphosphonates and retinoic acid in medical therapy of
Background.
The
Introduction. Local recurrence of
Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase is contained in multinucleated giant cells of
Benign aggressive tumors are common and can be debilitating for patients especially if they are in peri-articular regions or cause pathological fracture as is common for
Summary. We demonstrate that osteoclast-like cells of GCT result from the spontaneous fusion and differentiation of CD14+ cells of the monoblastic lineage by an autocrine mechanism mediated by RANKL, rather than induced by stromal cells. This process is further enhanced by the simultaneous impairment of the negative feed-back regulation of osteoclastogenesis by interferon β. Introduction.
We investigated whether the presence of a pathological
fracture increased the risk of local recurrence in patients with
a
Since high levels of urokinase-type plasminogen activation system have been associated with cancer metastasis, purpose of this study was to investigate its expression in patients with giant cell tumor and the relationship with outcome.
We retrospectively studied local recurrence of