The latter patient had a previous history of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and SALL4 was used on the HCC to distinguish metastatic/further HCC from a gastric metastatic primary with hepatoid differentiation.Eviscerated ileum passing through a traumatic tear on the sigmoid wall is a rare case and all the cases reported previously showed that the eviscerated intestines were necrotic. However, in this case, although the huge size of eviscerated intestine had already exceeded the intestinal ischemic time, the small intestine outside the anus was not necrotic. Here we report the case of a 73-year-old female who presented with evisceration of the small intestine out of her anus as long as 200 cm 7 h before. The eviscerated small intestine (ileum) appeared still viable and there were no signs of pain, obstruction, or peritonitis. An intermittent rectal concomitant with uterovaginal prolapse had been experienced by the patient before. On surgery, the ileum was not necrotic and pulled back out of the sigmoid wall tear. The cardinal uterosacral ligament may have an important role in maintaining the uterovagina in place. When this ligament loses its ability to anchor the uterovagina to the sacrum, both the uterovagina and the rectum will lose their fixation to the sacrum and prolapse will occur. Hence, the rectum located posterior to the uterovagina also relieves its squeeze pressure so that it will not disrupt the blood supply of the ileum when the ileum enters through the rectal lumen. Rectal concomitant with uterovaginal prolapse is an important factor to maintain the viability of the eviscerated intestine. Therefore, surgeons are still able to make better preparation before performing surgery.In this report, we describe a rare case of liver enzyme disturbance caused by myeloid sarcoma of the gallbladder and biliary tract. A 63-year-old man with progressive chronic myeloid leukemia presented with acute hepatitis. Viral serology revealed an infection with hepatitis E virus. The liver enzymes and bilirubin improved gradually under treatment with ribavirin, but there was a flair up shortly after. Imaging including CT and echo-endoscopy showed a thickened infiltrated gallbladder wall and dilated bile ducts, suspected for myeloid sarcoma. Biopsy of an atypical skin lesion, present at the same time, confirmed the diagnosis of acute extramedullary leukemia. After induction chemotherapy, hematological improvement was seen together with a decrease of bilirubin and liver enzymes and a normalization of the bile ducts and gallbladder on imaging. However, three months later, myeloid leukemia progressed again, and the patient deceased.Previous research has analyzed the effect of migration on fertility, and a number of hypotheses have been developed namely adaptation, socialization, selection, disruption and interrelation of events. Comparison among stayers in the origin countries, migrants and non-migrants in the destination country is essential to gain better understanding of the effects of migration on fertility. However, this joint comparison has been rarely conducted. We sought to fill this gap and analyze migrants' fertility in Italy. By merging different data sources for the first time, we were able to compare our target group of migrant women, respectively, born in Albania, Morocco and Ukraine with both Italian non-migrants and stayers in the country of origin. Considering the first three orders of births, multi-process hazard models were estimated in order to provide a more exhaustive and diversified scenario and to test the existing hypotheses. The results show that there is no single model of fertility for migrants in Italy. In addition, some hypotheses provide a better explanation of the fertility behavior than others do. Among women from Morocco, the socialization hypothesis tends to prevail, whereas Albanians' fertility is mostly explained in terms of adaptation. Disruption emerged as the main mechanism able to explain the fertility of migrants from Ukraine, and a clear interrelation between fertility and migration is apparent for women from Albania and Morocco, but only for the first birth.Housing is an important dimension of social inequality between couples, but it has been largely ignored in prior research on union dissolution. Extending the literature that controlled for the stabilizing effect of homeownership, we investigate whether housing, measured as household density, housing tenure and housing affordability, is related to the risk of union dissolution. Based on data from the German Family Panel (pairfam), we analyze 3441 coresidential partnerships. We run discrete-time event-history models to assess the risk of separation within a time frame of 7 years. Housing affordability is found to be negatively related to the risk of union dissolution among couples, as those couples with a high residual income (i.e., household income after deducting housing costs) were less likely to separate than those with a lower residual income. By contrast, household density is found to be unrelated to separation. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Temsirolimus.html In line with previous research, our findings indicate that homeowners had more stable relationships than tenants. The analysis shows that this was the case regardless of whether the home was jointly owned or was owned by one partner only.Young adults from non-intact families are more likely to leave the parental home at an early age than are young adults from intact families. While this association is well established in the existing literature, the underling mechanisms remain puzzling. In a recent investigation with prospective data from the SOEP (van den Berg et al. in Eur J Popul 34(5)873-900, 2018. 10.1007/s10680-017-9461-1), a large share of the effect of family structure on early home-leaving remained unexplained, in particular for stepfamilies. This study draws on longitudinal data from the German Family Panel (pairfam) to replicate and extend the analyses of van den Berg et al. (Eur J Popul 34(5)873-900, 2018. 10.1007/s10680-017-9461-1). The quality of the stepfather-child relationship, as well as parental monitoring and support, is added to existing analyses. However, an extended assessment of social resources does not seem to substantially help explain the association between family structure and early home-leaving.