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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adrenal cortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare neoplasm that affects all age groups, with a bimodal peak of incidence, in young individuals in the first decade or two of life and in older subjects in the fifth to seventh decades. It may be clinically "functional" with Cushing's syndrome, virilization, or feminization, or it may be "nonfunctional." We report on the case of a 42-yr-old woman who complained of
abdominal pain
and a large adrenal tumor measuring 20 cm in size. No endocrine symptoms were observed. Laboratory tests showed increased levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), serum cortisol, and urinary free cortisol. Cytohistologic features were typical of ACC. A striking presence of hyaline cytoplasmatic globules was seen in cytologic smears and histologically, being immunoreactive for vimentin, consistent with an intracellular store of intermediate filaments. The tumor showed high proliferative activity (40%) with
Ki-67
and negativity for p53, cerbB2, and bcl-2. Although hyaline globules are more frequent in pheochromocytomas and other neoplasms, they may also be present in ACC. These globules may be observed in cytologic smears. Also, the identification and immunohistochemical characterization of these hyaline globules in metastases may be useful in determining the origin of primary occult tumors. Diagn. Cytopathol. 1999;21:394-397.
...
PMID:Giant adrenal cortical carcinoma, clinically "nonfunctional": report of a case containing cytoplasmic hyaline globules of vimentin. 1057 70
Carcinomas of the extrahepatic bile ducts are uncommon neoplasms that are morphologically heterogeneous and associated with a poor prognosis. We have previously shown that the noninvasive and minimally invasive papillary carcinomas of the extrahepatic bile ducts behave as in situ carcinomas and are associated with a better prognosis. We reviewed the clinical records of 13 patients with invasive papillary carcinomas of the extrahepatic bile ducts and analyzed the microscopic features and selected immunohistochemical reactivity (p53, Mib-1, and Dpc4) that might correlate with patient survival. In addition, we present the updated SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results) data of the National Cancer Institute for the invasive extrahepatic bile duct carcinomas compiled from 1975 to 1998. The 13 patients with papillary carcinoma had a male to female ratio of 1:1, and their ages ranged from 33 to 89 years. Painless jaundice and
abdominal pain
were the most common complaints. Five tumors were located in the distal portion, one in the mid portion, and six in the proximal portion of the common bile duct. One papillary carcinoma arose in the right hepatic duct. The Whipple procedure was performed in six patients, common bile duct resection in six, and right hepatic lobectomy in one. The cell phenotype of the papillary carcinomas was biliary in nine and intestinal in three. One tumor had both biliary and intestinal phenotypes. Four tumors dedifferentiated (two to undifferentiated small cell carcinomas, one to small [oat] cell carcinoma, and one to giant cell carcinoma). Two papillary carcinomas extended into the pancreas and three into the liver. Only one patient had lymph node metastases at presentation. Follow-up was available in 10 patients. Six patients died of disease from 2 weeks to 2 years and 1 month after surgery. Four patients are alive with no evidence of disease from 4 months to 8 years and 8 months after surgery. Of 174 invasive papillary carcinomas compiled by the SEER program, 71 were confined to the ductal wall, and 61 had regional lymph node metastases. Papillary carcinomas confined to the ductal wall have better 10-year relative survival rates than adenocarcinomas limited to the wall (21% versus 12%). Likewise papillary carcinomas with lymph node metastasis have better prognosis than adenocarcinoma with nodal metastases (10-y survival rate of 12% versus 5%). Currently, the histologic type and the stage of the disease are the most important prognostic factors in these papillary carcinomas. Separation of invasive and noninvasive or minimally invasive papillary carcinoma is critical in estimating the patient outcome. Our findings suggest that there is no correlation between p53,
Ki-67
, and Dpc4 expression in these tumors and survival of the patients.
...
PMID:Invasive papillary carcinomas of the extrahepatic bile ducts: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 13 cases. 1248 Oct 4
Multinucleated epithelial giant cells (MEG) simulating viral cytopathic effect and/or dysplasia have been reported in the esophagus in association with inflammation, but the occurrence of similar cells in the colon has not been documented. Twenty-three colon specimens (22 biopsies and 1 partial colectomy) featuring MEG from 21 patients were evaluated for a variety of histologic features and correlated with clinical, endoscopic, and follow-up data. Patients included 9 males and 12 females (mean age, 64.9 years; range, 45-86 years). Eleven cases were obtained from 10 asymptomatic patients undergoing surveillance biopsies. Presenting symptoms in the remaining patients were dyspepsia, anemia,
abdominal pain
, and hematochezia. Over half (13 of 23) of the specimens were from descending and rectosigmoid colon, and almost all were visualized as polyps on endoscopy. Microscopically, all but 1 of the cases featured multiple MEG (range, 6 to >50 cells per biopsy) in the base and mid crypt zones of inflamed polyps with serrated architecture. Immunohistochemical stains for CMV, HSV, adenovirus, EBV, and polyoma virus were negative and no viral particles were identified on ultrastructural examination. Nuclear staining for hMLH1 and hMSH2, markers of microsatellite instability, was similar in distribution to adjacent serrated crypts, but reduced staining intensity was noted in occasional multinucleated cells. Expression of
Ki-67
and cleaved caspase 3 was consistent with a quiescent or low proliferative state. Clinical follow-up was available for 9 patients (mean duration, 22.7 months). One patient died of heart failure; all others were well at last follow-up. Bizarre MEG may occasionally be seen within the crypts of inflamed polyps with serrated architecture, raising concern for dysplasia or viral infection. Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural studies fail to establish a viral etiology, and follow-up does not indicate clinically aggressive disease. These changes appear to represent a nonspecific, possibly degenerative response to inflammation and injury, and should be distinguished from dysplasia.
...
PMID:Multinucleated epithelial giant cells in colorectal polyps: a potential mimic of viropathic and/or dysplastic changes. 1595 56
About 40% of nonfunctioning pancreatic endocrine carcinomas (NF-PEC) cannot be cured by surgery due to advanced stage disease. Somatostatin analogues have been proposed as first line therapy in these cases. We performed a prospective phase IV study to assess the efficacy of octreotide in advanced NF-PEC and identify factors predictive of response to therapy. Twenty-one consecutive patients with octreoscan-positive advanced-stage well-differentiated NF-PEC were treated with long-acting release octreotide 20 mg i.m. at diagnosis. The immunohistochemical expression of somatostatin receptor 2 (SSTR2) and the quantitative mRNA analysis of SSTR2 and SSTR5 were assessed in 12 tumours. The tumour proliferative fraction was assessed by immunohistochemistry for
Ki-67
. Eight patients (38%) had stable disease (SD) after a median follow-up of 49.5 months. Thirteen patients (62%) developed progression after a median of 18 months. Tumour progression correlated with a proliferative index>or=5% (P=0.016), weight loss (P=0.006) and absence of
abdominal pain
(P=0.003) at diagnosis. Other clinical (age, gender and primary tumour resection) or pathological parameters (site, size and liver metastasis) lacked significant correlation with tumour progression. No difference in the amount of SSTR2 mRNA and protein or SSTR5 mRNA was found between tumours that were stable (n=5) and seven tumours that progressed (n=7). Treatment with long-acting release octreotide was associated with stabilization of disease and a good quality of life in 38% of patients. A
Ki-67
index>or=5% and/or the presence of weight loss may justify more aggressive therapy without waiting for radiologically proven progression of disease.
...
PMID:Predictive factors of efficacy of the somatostatin analogue octreotide as first line therapy for advanced pancreatic endocrine carcinoma. 1715 66
A 34-year-old, previously healthy female presented with severe acute upper quadrant
abdominal pain
and an 11-cm cystic mass in the tail of the pancreas. The patient underwent distal pancreatectomy with total gross excision of the mass. Grossly, the mass consisted of a multiloculated cystic lesion measuring 11.7 cm in its greatest dimension. An irregular solid lobulation at the lateral aspect of the cyst was visible, measuring 3 cm in the largest dimension. Histologically, there were two distinct components: a mucinous, neoplastic epithelial cyst with few foci of moderate atypia, and nodular spindle cell areas containing multinucleated tumor giant cells. Immunohistochemically, the multinucleated giant cells were positive for vimentin, CD68 and CD45, and negative for cytokeratin and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA). The spindle cells of hypercellular stroma were stained for vimentin, but not for EMA or carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). Neuron-specific enolase (NSE), S100 and
Ki-67
showed no reactivity. The histological diagnosis "osteoclast-like giant cell tumor of the pancreas associated with borderline mucinous cystic neoplasm" was made. The patient recovered and is free of disease 4 years after the diagnosis.
...
PMID:A case of osteoclast-like giant cell tumor of the pancreas associated with borderline mucinous cystic neoplasm. 1849 71
Mullerian adenosarcomas are rare mixed tumors of low malignant potential that occur mainly in the uterus and also in extrauterine locations. Microscopically, they may be difficult to distinguish from adenofibromas. In this clinicopathologic study of 55 adenosarcomas, the mean patient age was 50 years (range: 13 to 83 y). Thirty-seven tumors were of the uterine corpus, 11 of the cervix, 4 of the ovary, and 1 each of the fallopian tube, vagina, and Douglas peritoneum.
Abdominal pain
and vaginal bleeding were the usual complaints. Treatment was known in 50 patients: 10 had polypectomy, 1 cone biopsy, and 39 hysterectomy, which was accompanied by bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in 24 and lymphadenectomy in 4. Five patients had radiotherapy and 2 of them had chemotherapy. Stage was known in 41 cases. Of 30 tumors of the uterine corpus, 17 were stage IA, 11 stage IB, 1 stage IC, and 1 stage IIIC. Four cervical tumors were stage IB. Three of the 4 ovarian tumors were stage IA and the other was stage IIIC. The tumor of the fallopian tube was stage IC, and the tumors of the vagina and recto-uterine pouch were confined to their site of origin. Most uterine tumors were polypoid masses ranging from 1 to 20 cm (mean: 6.5 cm). Microscopically, sarcomatous overgrowth was found in 18 cases (33%), heterologous elements in 13 (24%), and sex cordlike differentiation in 7 (13%). Fourteen of 30 uterine tumors (47%) had myometrial invasion that was minimal in 5, involved one-third of the myometrial thickness in 7, and more than 50% in 2. Of 4 cervical tumors, 2 were endocervical polyps, 1 invaded one-third of the cervical wall, and the other invaded its full thickness. Follow-up information (2 mo to 18 y; average: 7.5 y) was available in 29 patients. Six developed metastases and 5 of them died of tumor. Four had adenosarcomas with sarcomatous overgrowth; however, the other 2 patients had typical low-grade adenosarcomas of the uterine corpus and cervix, respectively, exhibiting only mild nuclear atypia of the stromal component and </=2 mitotic figures/10 high power fields. Both were initially underdiagnosed as adenofibromas. The finding of such cases, which raises the controversy of whether or not adenofibroma exists as a tumor entity, prompted us to make a comparative immunohistochemical analysis of 23 typical adenosarcomas, 8 adenosarcomas with sarcomatous overgrowth, and 29 benign and malignant related lesions, including 7 clinically benign adenofibromas. Adenosarcomas with sarcomatous overgrowth showed strong immunoreaction for
Ki-67
and p53 and loss of CD10 and progesterone receptors immunostaining; in contrast, the immunoreaction for these tumor markers in typical adenosarcomas without sarcomatous overgrowth was similar to that of adenofibromas associated with favorable outcome and other benign lesions such as endometrial polyps and endometriosis. These findings suggest that some of the tumors currently classified as adenofibromas, on the basis of their low mitotic count and lack of significant nuclear atypia, are, in fact, well-differentiated adenosarcomas.
...
PMID:Mullerian adenosarcoma: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 55 cases challenging the existence of adenofibroma. 1894 2
A 47-year-old woman who presented with
abdominal pain
was found to have a 20 cm cystic retroperitoneal mass. Pathology indicated a colonic-type adenocarcinoma arising in a primary retroperitoneal mature cystic teratoma. The adenocarcinoma was predominantly intracystic with focal superficial invasion into the cyst wall but not beyond the teratoma capsule. Immunohistochemistry showed that the adenocarcinoma cells were diffusely positive for cytokeratin 20 (CK20) and caudal-type homeobox transcription factor-2 (CDX2) but negative for CK7, confirming the colonic phenotype. In addition, the adenocarcinoma was seen adjacent to teratomatous colonic-type mucosa with adenomatous change (i.e. adenoma), suggesting that it was probably arising from a colonic-type adenoma within the teratoma. The carcinoma had a higher
Ki-67
proliferation index and had a higher percentage of cells stained for p53 than the adjacent adenomatous lesion. To the authors' knowledge this is the first documented case in which a colonic-type adenocarcinoma was seen arising from a precursor lesion (i.e. a colonic-type adenoma in a primary retroperitoneal mature cystic teratoma) and is the second case of intestinal-type adenocarcinoma arising in a primary retroperitoneal mature cystic teratoma.
...
PMID:Colonic-type adenocarcinoma arising in a primary retroperitoneal mature cystic teratoma. 1906 55
Presented herein is an unusual case of intraductal tubular carcinoma, intestinal type, of the pancreas. This tumor was characterized by intraductal adenoma with a few malignant foci, and also by entire involvement of the main pancreatic duct and no involvement of its branches. A 67-year-old man was admitted to hospital because of
abdominal pain
. On endoscopy and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, irregular pancreatic duct was seen. No mucus secretion was observed on endoscopy. Because a biopsy showed tubular atypical cells, pancreato-duodenectomy was performed. Grossly, the entire main pancreatic duct had intraductal tumor, sparing its branches. No intraductal mucus was noted. Microscopically, the entire main pancreatic duct had proliferation of tubular adenomatous tumor without secretory mucins. Goblet cells were present in some areas. No pyloric type tubules were recognized. Malignant transformation was present in a few areas. No invasive features were recognized. On mucin histochemistry the tumor cell cytoplasm contained a little or no neutral and acidic mucus, and no secretory mucins were recognized. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for cytokeratins (CK), CK 8, 9, 18, 19 and 20, epithelial membrane antigen, CDX2, carbohydrate antigen 19-9, and
Ki-67
(labeling 30%), MUC2, MUC5AC and MUC6, and CD10. The tumor cells were negative for C-erbB2, MUC1, trypsin, pancreatic amylase and pancreatic lipase. The tumor cells were negative for p53 protein, but the malignant foci were positive for p53 protein and had high
Ki-67
antigen (labeling 60%). The patient was free of disease 4 years after the operation. In summary, presented here is an extremely rare case of intraductal tubular carcinoma, intestinal type, showing focal malignant foci.
...
PMID:Intraductal tubular carcinoma, intestinal type, of the pancreas. 1912 Oct 93
Primary choriocarcinomas of the liver are rare. Previous reported cases were mostly in infants with only rare adult cases. Here, we presented five adult cases. The patients were all males, with an average age of 41.6 years (from 36 to 48 years). Clinical presentations included right upper
abdominal pain
or abdominal distension. All patients presented with a large hepatic mass on ultrasonography that measured 11 cm on average in the greatest diameter. Elevated serum human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) levels were noted in all cases. At presentation, the tumor was confined to the liver in two patients and therefore surgically resected. The other three patients presented with extrahepatic metastases on imaging study and therefore only received chemotherapy. All five patients died from the tumor within 2 to 8 months. Autopsy was performed for all five cases. The autopsy confirmed that the choriocarcinoma was confined to the liver in two surgically resected cases. The other three patients had metastatic choriocarcinoma in the lung (two patients), peritoneum (one patient), adrenal glands (one patient), and brain (one patient). None of the patients had any evidence of a testicular tumor or scar after examination of the entirely submitted testes. No tumor was observed in central nervous system, mediastinum, or other organs other than described above. Grossly, the primary tumors were large, soft, hemorrhagic, and with foci of necrosis. Histologically, the tumors were composed of mononucleated trophoblastic cells with round nuclei, clear cytoplasm, and prominent nucleoli admixed with large, multinucleated syncytiotrophoblastic cells. Immunohistochemically, tumor cells were strongly positive for keratin, HCG, and focally positive for human placental lactogen.
Ki-67
proliferation index was high (mean 75%) in the mononucleated trophoblastic cells. Our series is the largest one to document primary hepatic choriocarcinoma in adults. Although these tumors are rare, they behave in a very aggressive fashion.
...
PMID:Primary choriocarcinoma of the liver: a clinicopathological study of five cases in males. 2001 45
The author herein reports histopathologic features of 31 surgical cases of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) of the digestive organs. The 31 cases of GIST were diagnosed in our pathology laboratory. They consisted of 24 cases of gastric GIST, 1 case of hepatic GIST, 1 case of small intestinal GIST, 4 cases of colon GIST, and 1 case of rectal GIST. The age of the patients ranged from 56 year to 84 years with a mean of 71 years. Male to female ratio was 21:10. The presenting symptoms were gastrointestinal bleeding in 13 cases,
abdominal pain
and discomfort in 13 cases, and asymptomatic in 5 cases. Endoscopy and imaging modalities including US, CT and MRI were useful to detect the tumors in all cases, and biopsies confirmed the GIST diagnosis in 21 cases. The size of GIST ranged from 1 cm to 12 cm with a mean of 4.3 cm. Grossly, 23 cases were submucosal tumors, 6 serosa-side tumors, 1 solid tumor in the liver, and 1 rectal polyp. Histologically, 28 cases were of spindle cell type and 3 of epithelioid type. According to mitotic counts and tumor size, the malignant risk was very low in 4 cases, low in 14 cases, intermediate in 9 cases, and high in 4 cases. Immunohistochemically, all cases were positive for KIT and vimentin, 30 cases for CD34, and 4 cases for alpha-smooth muscle actin. None were positive for desmin and S100 protein.
Ki-67
labeling ranged from 2% to 18%. P53 protein was negative in all cases. PDGFRA was positive in 20 cases among 24 cases examined. Genetic analysis using PCR-direct sequencing method was performed in 5 GISTs; all the 5 GISTs showed point mutations or deletions in KIT gene, but did not in PDGFRA gene. The 5 cases of GIST were positive for PDGFRA protein, suggesting that PDGFRA overexpression is not associated with PDGFRA gene mutations. Four of the 31 cases showed metastases. The chemotherapy was imatinib mesylate in 6 cases, and none in 25 cases. Four cases of high risk died of GIST, and 27 cases are alive now without tumors.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal stromal tumor of the digestive organs: a histopathologic study of 31 cases in a single Japanese institute. 2012 84
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