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  • Articles  (2)
  • Key words: Colonoscopy — Colorectal neoplasia — Follow-up  (1)
  • Mangroves  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Surgical endoscopy and other interventional techniques 14 (2000), S. 1162-1166 
    ISSN: 1432-2218
    Keywords: Key words: Colonoscopy — Colorectal neoplasia — Follow-up
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Background: Patients with a colorectal neoplasm are at risk for metachronous neoplasia. This risk usually is stratified according to the number, size, and histology of the index lesion(s). This study was performed to search for factors contributing not only to a very high risk of metachronous lesions but also to a very low risk. Methods: An extensive neoplasia follow-up database was used to identify patients who were neoplasia prone and neoplasia resistant. Groups were defined as having consecutive colonoscopies that were either all positive or all negative for adenoma(s). Subgroups with two, three, and four consecutive positive or negative examinations were formed, then analyzed for gender, number of index neoplasms, and family history. Patients with familial adenomatous polyposis or with families fulfilling the Amsterdam criteria for hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer were excluded. Results: The database showed 702 patients who had two follow-up examinations, 103 of which were neoplasia prone and 245 neoplasia resistant. After three consecutive examinations (420 patients), the numbers were 51, and 87, respectively, and after four examinations (231 patients), they were 26 and 34. As the groups became better defined, the proportion of women in the neoplasia-resistant group and the proportion of men in the neoplasia-prone group increased. When gender and number of index lesions were combined, groups were most definitively characterized. Incidence of a positive family history of colorectal cancer was not different between the groups. As the number of follow-up examinations increased, the number of large polyps found decreased. Conclusions: Groups of patients particularly liable to develop colorectal neoplasia or particularly resistant to it can be identified. Female gender and a single-index lesion favor neoplasia resistance, whereas male gender and multiple-index lesions favor a predisposition for neoplasia.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Global change is defined here for this review as changes caused by increasing greenhouse gas emissions resulting in a high CO2 world and the direct and indirect changes that ensue. Increasing green house gas emissions are causing three major impacts on the ocean: warming sea surface temperature (SST), ocean acidification and deoxygenation (Turley et al 2011). The latter two are poorly understood at present, particularly in Eastern Africa. Secondary impacts include sea level rise due to melting polar ice caps. Coral bleaching and death caused by SST rise has been extensively studied and measured (HoeghGuldberg 1999; Hughes et al. 2003), including in the WIO (Obura 2005, McClanahan 2009), with likely ecosystem phase shifts as coral reefs become dominated by macroalgae (brown algae such as Turbinaria, Sargassum spp.) (Bellwood et al. 2004; Hughes et al. 2005). Ocean acidification is likely to have enormous impacts on marine resources and hence fisheries (Turley et al. 2011), as ocean chemistry is changed and thus any marine organisms that rely on Ph sensitive chemical reactions will be affected. This field is still relatively new and early reports predict trophic level shifts as organisms with calcium carbonate skeletons, e.g molluscs, corals, are compromised. Deoxygenation is caused by ocean warming (oxygen becomes less soluble) which will result in less growth of most marine organisms and a shift to low oxygen tolerant organisms, often microorganisms. Coastal environments and people are also undergoing changes that are directly related to human pressures caused by development and other activities. These include increasing population, mechanisation (eg in fisheries), industrialisation (eg ports and coastal cities), pollution, and extraction of oil and gas.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Global warming ; Sea level changes ; Greenhouse effect ; Mangroves ; Surface temperature
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Not Known
    Format: 50pp.
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