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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient who died from oat-cell
carcinoma of the lung
had had
abdominal pain
and obstipation. Autopsy revealed autonomic neuropathy limited to the gastrointestinal tract, which was considered to be related to carcinoma as a remote effect. This interpretation was further supported by the presence of Wallerian degeneration of the dorsal columns. Autonomic neuropathy involving the gastrointestinal tract in association with malignant disease has not been previously described.
...
PMID:Autonomic neuropathy and carcinoma of the lung. 16 52
Isolated, small bowel metastases from
lung carcinoma
are extremely rare; only 34 cases have been previously reported. Rarer still is the presentation of
lung carcinoma
with a lesion metastatic to the small bowel. These 34 cases and 3 recent ones from Easton Hospital (Easton, PA) were analyzed to clarify the clinical and pathologic features of the disease. The majority of patients had a history of
abdominal pain
(86%), melena (23%), or nausea and vomiting (26%). Few had weight loss (16%). Twenty-one patients (57%) came to the hospital with perforation and peritonitis, including 9 in whom
lung carcinoma
was undiagnosed before laparotomy. Thirteen patients (34%) underwent laparotomy because of small bowel obstruction, 2 (6%) for bleeding and 1 (3%) for a mass found during work-up. Squamous cell (49%) and large cell (22%) were the most common cell types, and the jejunum was the most common site of the metastases (79%). Survival time was dismal (mean 51 days) and was unaffected by therapy to the primary site of the cancer or its metastases. The authors conclude that small bowel metastases from
lung carcinoma
are not uncommon and may be seen more frequently as patients live longer after their diagnosis of cancer. Small bowel metastases must be considered in any patient with both
lung carcinoma
and
abdominal pain
, and should be expected in patients with both
lung carcinoma
and an acute abdomen.
...
PMID:Small bowel metastases from primary lung carcinoma: a rarity waiting to be found? 148 99
Most of the symptoms from a malignant tumor are caused by local invasion by the tumor, or obstruction, either at the site of the primary disease or by metastases. However, tumors can produce symptoms at a remote site. Patients with gastrointestinal malignancy may present with symptoms which include dysphagia, nausea, vomiting,
abdominal pain
, diarrhea, bleeding and ascites. Palliation gastrectomy delays or prevents these symptoms. About 30% of gastric carcinomas are inoperable at the time of presentation. Chemotherapy is rarely effective in the palliation of gastric carcinoma. Laser irradiation can be delivered to assay site accessible to fibreoptic endoscopy, which is an advantage over endocavity irradiation or diathermy fulguration. Ascites is a common and disabling implication in patients with advanced malignant disease. Spironolactone will increase urinary sodium excretion significantly and control their ascites. If spironolactone fails to control, useful control can be achieved by draining the ascites. Patients with
carcinoma of the lung
may present with symptoms that include cough, bloody sputum and dyspnoea. Pain in the chest wall is usually secondary to invasion of the parietal pleura, ribs or intercostal nerves. Lesions in the medial portion of the right upper lobe, or mediastinal metastases, may invade or compress the superior vena cava, causing venous hypertension with oedema of the head and arms. The patients may complain of dyspnoea, dysphagia, stridor and headaches. Radiotherapy can be expected to improve the quality of life for these patients. Successful palliation of symptoms is almost related to tumor regression. The problems of obstruction and bleeding from malignant tumor is common. Recently, laser techniques have been applied to aid in palliation of these problems. Malignant effusion may occur early and be the first signs of metastases. The aim of therapy is to evacuate the fluid and induce pleural adhesion. One of the sad situations that we have to face is the patient with recurrent cancer which complains of various symptoms. The relief of symptoms is the most important palliative therapy to them.
...
PMID:[Palliative therapy in cancer. 3. Palliation of the symptoms from a malignant tumor (1)]. 169 82
A case of recurrent small cell
carcinoma of the lung
, accompanied by intraperitoneal metastasis, was orally treated with etoposide (50 mg/day) for 3 consecutive weeks. Subjective symptoms such as
abdominal pain
began to improve one week after the start of treatment. After three weeks of treatment, these symptoms disappeared completely, and CT findings also improved. The serum NSE level, which was as high as 89.5 ng/ml before treatment, fell to 8.7 ng/ml after 3 weeks of treatment. The patient is now being followed at the outpatient clinic of our hospital. As adverse reactions to the drug, alopecia and leukopenia were observed. The leukopenia appeared in the third week of treatment, but the white blood cell count returned to normal soon after the drug was discontinued.
...
PMID:[A case of small cell carcinoma of the lung responding well to oral etoposide therapy]. 184 93
The antigen reactive with murine monoclonal antibody (MAb) KS1/4 is expressed on epithelial malignancies and some normal epithelial tissues. Studies were undertaken to evaluate KS1/4-methotrexate (KS1/4-MTX) immunoconjugate in patients with advanced non-small cell
carcinoma of the lung
. Eleven patients in two different groups received KS1/4-MTX in two different escalating dose infusion schedules with a maximal tolerated dose of 1,750 mg/M2 and a cumulative dose of MTX of 40 mg/M2. Toxicities were similar in both groups and included fever, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
abdominal pain
, guaiac positive stool, and hypoalbuminemia. Two patients had an associated aseptic meningitis. One patient had a 50% decrease in two lung nodules without a change in lymphangitic infiltrates. This patient received a second course of treatment and developed an immune complex-mediated arthritis and serum sickness. Four patients mounted a human antimouse antibody response. Post-treatment tumor biopsies documented binding of MAb KS1/4. These studies document the feasibility and potential usefulness of a MAb directed against tumor-associated antigens with the targeting of chemotherapeutic drugs in patients with non-small cell
lung carcinoma
.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibody KS1/4-methotrexate immunoconjugate studies in non-small cell lung carcinoma. 792 45
Eighty-two persons with chronic
abdominal pain
, submucosal or extrinsic masses, or achalasia and 20 volunteers without symptoms were prospectively examined with endosonography to assess the incidence and features of mediastinal lymphadenopathy. In 99 persons without malignant disease, 86% were found to have paraesophageal lymph nodes by endosonography. Overall, 352 lymph nodes were found, with a mean of 3.6 +/- 2.8 SD lymph nodes per person (range, 0 to 14 lymph nodes). Increasing age and chronic pancreatitis were found to correlate with a greater number of lymph nodes. Otherwise, clinical features including quantity of tobacco use, height, weight, sex, and race did not correlate with a greater number of lymph nodes as assessed by regression analysis. The mean width and length among the lymph nodes was 4.9 +/- 2.4 mm (range, 1 to 15 mm) and 9.9 +/- 5.2 mm (range, 1 to 30 mm), respectively, with the largest lymph nodes occurring in the peritracheal and peribronchial regions. Of all subjects, 95% had a maximum lymph node width of 10 mm or less, but only 40% had a maximum lymph node length of 10 mm or less. The most common ultrasound features of these lymph nodes included a triangular or crescent-shaped and homogeneous or centrally echogenic pattern. These ultrasound characteristics were distinct from those previously described in malignant lymph nodes. In summary, a high background prevalence of mediastinal lymph nodes exists as detected by endosonography and must be considered when performing esophageal or
lung carcinoma
staging examinations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mediastinal lymph node detection with endosonography. 829 2
The authors report a rare case of metastatic carcinoma of the large bowel, secondary to a primary bronchogenic adenocarcinoma.
Abdominal pain
developed in a 44-year old man 5 months after lobectomy for lung adenocarcinoma. The diagnosis of a large caecal extraluminal mass was established by means of sonography, scanner and laparoscopy. Palliative resection (brain metastases) was performed. Postoperative histological examination revealed the resected tumor to be identical to the lung adenocarcinoma. The patient eventually died 4 months after resection (complication of intracranial hypertension). Diagnosis and therapeutic features of metastatic extra-thoracic
lung carcinoma
are discussed.
...
PMID:[An unusual secondary localization of bronchial adenocarcinoma]. 831 14
A rare case of severe small bowel hemorrhage due to jejunal metastases from a large-cell type
carcinoma of the lung
is reported. A 69-yr-old Japanese woman presented with complaints of mild
abdominal pain
and liquid tarry stools 6 months following surgery for
lung carcinoma
. Gastroduodenoscopy and barium enema yielded unremarkable findings, although a subsequent small bowel enema revealed a large, 15-cm ulcerated mass in the jejunum. This tumor was resected and histology confirmed to be consistent with a metastasis from the primary undifferentiated large-cell
carcinoma of the lung
. The patient had an uneventful postoperative course and survived for 9 months. There have been only two prior case reports of major intestinal hemorrhage secondary to pulmonary carcinoma metastases in the English literature. Previous reports of such metastases of the small bowel have bowel have documented a very poor prognosis and our patient demonstrated the longest survival period to date. The clinical course of this patient suggests that the early diagnosis and palliative surgery for this complication provide a more favourable outcome.
...
PMID:Metastatic large-cell lung carcinoma presenting as gastrointestinal hemorrhage. 901 35
A case of acute gangrenous appendicitis with perforation caused by metastatic small cell
carcinoma of the lung
in a 65 year old man is reported. The manifestation of appendicitis occurred more than 4 years after the diagnosis of the bronchogenic carcinoma. With longer survival of patients with disseminated tumors it is probable that new manifestations of those malignancies will be discovered. Acute appendicitis due to metastasis from a distant neoplasm should be considered in the differential diagnosis of right lower
abdominal pain
in the oncology patient.
...
PMID:Metastasis from small cell carcinoma of the lung producing acute appendicitis. 1084 73
A 66-yr-old man with a history of squamous cell carcinoma and small cell
carcinoma of the lung
presented with nausea, vomiting, and
abdominal pain
. After passing black stools, he underwent upper endoscopy which showed gastric ulceration. A gastric brushing was performed which showed numerous nonseptate, ribbon-like hyphae with right-angle branching. The cytologic features permitted a diagnosis of a zygomycotic infection which was confirmed by histologic examination. Despite appropriate antifungal therapy, the patient expired. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of gastric zygomycosis diagnosed by brushing cytology. We believe that gastric brushing cytology allows for rapid diagnosis of zygomycotic mycoses, due to the distinctive morphology of these organisms; however, histologic examination is still required for assessment of invasion.
...
PMID:Gastric zygomycosis diagnosed by brushing cytology. 1090 34
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