Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy using an implantable reservoir was used for 22 patients with liver metastasis from September 1986 to March 1990. The material consisted of 8 subjects with gastric cancer and 14 with colorectal cancer. One had metastasis in one lobe (H1), 10 had a few scattered metastases in both lobes (H2) and 11 had numerous metastases in both lobes (H3). In 5 cases, a reservoir was implanted to prevent the recurrence after hepatectomy. Infusion catheter was placed in the proper hepatic artery in 5 cases via the gastroduodenal artery at laparotomy and it was carried out subcutaneously via the femoral artery in 17 cases. In all cases intra-arterial infusion of 5-FU was continuously administered followed by intermittent one shot injection of ADM. The clinical effectiveness of the therapy was well evaluated. One-year cumulative survival rate of all cases by Kaplan-Meier method was 55% and that of H2 cases was 78%. No recurrence was noted in post hepatectomy cases. Eight cases (36.3%) showed remarkable complications, which made it impossible to continue intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy: hepatic artery occlusion (3 cases), infection (2 cases), abdominal pain (1 case), hematoma in the implanted site (1 case) and dislocation of the infusion catheter (1 case). From the present study, it is considered that intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy is a useful procedure for the control of liver metastasis. Regimens for improved chemotherapy and the maintenance of more useful and safer catheters should therefore be investigated for further development of the therapeutical estimation.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation and problem of intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy of liver metastasis from digestive organ cancer]. 211 5

A case of hepatoma with cirrhosis for whom hepatectomy was impossible because of a severe complication is reported. The case has been treated with various treatments, so long survival has been obtained. The patient is a 56-year-old female with hepatoma with cirrhosis. The initial symptom was bleeding from esophageal varices. Her condition was not suitable for hepatectomy because of hypersplenism and remarkable hepatic disorder. Consequently, she was given endoscopic sclerotherapy for esophageal varices, partial splenic embolization for hypersplenism, and transarterial embolization with ADM, Lipiodol and Spongel powder for hepatoma. Although abdominal pain, pleural effusion and bleeding from gastric ulcer appeared after embolization, esophageal varices and hypersplenism were significantly improved; reduction of 75% of hepatoma was observed and AFP decreased from 18.7 ng to 3 ng. At 12 months after the embolization, there is no sign of hepatoma growth, rupture of esophageal varices or hypersplenism.
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PMID:[Transarterial embolization in the treatment of hepatoma complicated with cirrhosis, esophageal varices and hypersplenism]. 284 16

A 73-year-old male with low abdominal pain on urination and frequent urination was diagnosed as poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of prostate. He received endocrine therapy with DESD and bilateral orchiectomy. This treatment was not effective, so he was given intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy with MTX, ADM and CDDP using the reservoir system. After 2 courses of this chemotherapy the regression rate was 75%, and the pathological examination after the chemotherapy revealed no cancer cells. There is no established chemotherapy for prostate cancer at present. Thus this case is very suggestive for the treatment of prostate cancer.
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PMID:[A case report of prostate cancer resistant to endocrine therapy successfully treated with intra-arterial chemotherapy]. 757 95

A 56-year-old-man complained of abdominal pain, and was diagnosed as having advanced rectal cancer with synchronous multiple metastatic liver cancer (H 3) in July 1999. He underwent low anterior resection and hepatic partial resection (S 1, S 2+S 3, S 5, S 6, S 8) in August 1999. In addition, he underwent hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAI) 6 times at ADM 30 mg+5-FU 1,000 mg+MMC 16 mg between October 1999 and July 2000 for recurrent metastatic liver cancer. He has survived more than 6 years after the initial surgery. Multidisciplinary treatment with hepatic resection may well be a strategy for patients with multiple colorectal liver cancer, even though H 3 type of metastasis.
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PMID:[A case of effective multidisciplinary treatment with hepatic resection for synchronous multiple liver metastases from rectal cancer]. 1703 41