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

A 75-year-old man initially complained of pollakiuria and low abdominal pain, and died of massive bleeding from an exacerbated gastric ulcer. The diagnosis of primary cardiac lymphoma was made postmortem. The tumor involved only the epicardium and myocardium, which met the criteria of primary cardiac lymphoma as defined by the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The lymphoma consisted of large cells and expressed the B cell marker, CD20. Although chronic inflammation due to chronic renal failure was observed in the pericardium around the lymphoma, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was conducted to detect monoclonality at the DNA level in lymphoma cells, which were shown to comprise a monoclonal population.
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PMID:Case report of primary cardiac lymphoma. The applications of PCR to the diagnosis of primary cardiac lymphoma. 147 62

A 79-year-old women with upper abdominal pain, vomiting and weight loss was found at endoscopy to have a large tumour mass in the gastric body. Histology of forceps biopsies revealed an adenocarcinoma of intestinal type. Gastrectomy was performed, but extensive lymph node metastasis precluded a curative surgical approach. Histopathological study of the specimen, however, revealed two distict malignancies, which arose in the setting of Helicobacter pylori-associated chronic gastritis with partial mucosal atrophy. One tumour was a gastric carcinoma, while the other was a primary B-cell lymphoma of the stomach (CD20-positive). The lymphoma comprised both a low-grade component (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue- or MALT-type lymphoma), and a high-grade component (large cell lymphoma with CD30-positive giant cells). Infection with H. pylori was confirmed by the serological presence of IgG antibodies to H. pylori-antigens, including antibodies against the 128 kDa protein of the cytotoxin-associated gene (cagA gene) of H. pylori.
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PMID:Simultaneous gastric adenocarcinoma and MALT-type lymphoma in Helicobacter pylori infection. 854 31

Helicobacter pylori-like organisms (Hp) and polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNs) in 2614 gastroduodenal biopsies from 602 patients with dyspepsia, in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates, between October 1990 and October 1992, were histologically graded to determine the prevalence of Hp gastritis and their utilization in the evaluation of treatment efficacy in these patients. Symptoms of functional dyspepsia included, in order of frequency, abdominal pain or discomfort, flatulence, burning sensation, regurgitation, fullness, nausea, vomiting, bloating and belching. The biopsies were paraffin embedded, sectioned and stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H and E) to grade the inflammation. In addition to H and E, several special stains including modified Giemsa (MG), Wharthin-Starry silver and cold Ziehl-Neelsen stains were utilized to clearly identify Hp organisms. Giemsa method was found to be superior to other special stains in visualizing the Hp organisms in paraffin sections, and was utilized in every case. Two immunohistochemical markers for B cells (CD20) and T cells (CD45RO) were utilized for labeling lymphocytes infiltrating the lamina propria of the gastroduodenal biopsies in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sections. H and E and MG stained sections were utilized to count PMNs and Hp, and were graded 0, 1, 2, and 3, corresponding to none, mild, moderate, and severe grades of the Sydney system for classification of gastritis, respectively. Of the total initial 2318 endoscopic biopsies, 98.8% of the patients had suitable biopsies for histologic evaluation. Unsuitable biopsies were recovered from patients with gastric carcinoma. Inflammation was seen in 98.5% of 595 patients with suitable biopsies. In 74.5% of these patients the inflammation was active; 37.5, 32.5 and 4.5% had mild, moderate and severe active inflammation, respectively. In the remaining 24% of the 595 patients, the gastritis was chronic without activity or atrophic changes. As many as 73.6% of the patients with suitable biopsies were Hp positive; 39.8, 29.1 and 4.7% had grades 1, 2 and 3 Hp, respectively. Intestinal metaplasia was found in 28.9% of the 602 patients, and was seen more often in Hp positive than Hp negative patients (34.5 vs 14%, P < 0.005, for d.f. = 1; chi 2 = 10.35). Of the Hp positive patients, 172 and 46 patients attended the first and second follow-up endoscopy visits, respectively. The triple treatment was composed of one dose of tinidazole (2gm), doxycycline, 200 mg initial dose and 100 mg daily for two weeks, and bismuth subcitrate (Gist-Brocades nv, Delft, The Netherlands), 2 tablets twice daily for 4 weeks. After triple drug treatment, eradication of Hp was accomplished, histologically, in 38.4 and 45.7% of the patients on first and second follow-up visits, respectively. Thus, the Sydney system-based grading scale provides an objective histological evaluation of Hp gastritis for accurate prevalence studies, and may prove to be of value in estimating treatment efficacy.
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PMID:Grading Helicobacter pylori gastritis in dyspeptic patients. 881 77

Lymphomas of the marginal spleen zone are an entity recently considered as separate by the International Lymphoma Study Group. There are B-cell non Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) of low grade malignancy with a characteristic phenotype that allows to differentiate from mantle lymphomas and other B-cell lymphoproliferative syndromes. The case of a 69-year-old female patient admitted for abdominal pain due to large splenomegaly is reported. Pancytopenia and the presence of atypical large-sized lymphocytes with extensive cytoplasm and a rounded nucleus with indentations, reticulated appearing chromatin and one or several nucleoli were of note in the hemogram. Microscopic examination of the bone marrow demonstrated moderate-degree lymphocytary infiltration with grade I reticulin fibrosis. Laparotomy with splenectomy was performed. White pulp invasion with multifocal infiltration of the red pulp by lymphocytes of the same characteristics as those observed in the peripheral blood and bone marrow were observed on microscopic bone marrow examination. Immunophenotypic study of these lymphocytes was positive for CD19, CD20 and CD22 while being negative for CD5, CD10, CD23, CD25, CD11c and FMC7, the phenotype belonging to the lymphocytes of marginal spleen zone. Following splenectomy the patient recovered hemoperipheral counts and did not undergo additional treatment. The patient died due to septic shock of respiratory origin 4 months later. The clinical, morphologic and immunophenotypic features of marginal spleen zone lymphomas are reported with emphasis on the differences with other B-cell non Hodgkin's lymphomas of low malignancy.
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PMID:[Lymphoma of the marginal zone of the spleen. A case study]. 923 20

The clinicopathological and immunohistochemical findings in 25 cases of inflammatory pseudotumor of lymph nodes (IPT) are presented. The patients were 13 women and 12 men between 8 and 81 years of age. Clinically, symptoms of prior infection, fatigue, abdominal pain, weight loss, fever of unknown origin, pelvic inflammatory disease, or nausea and night sweats were obtained in 15 patients, whereas six patients presented with asymptomatic lymphadenopathy. In four additional patients, no clinical information was obtained. The involved nodes included cervical, supraclavicular, inguinal, mesenteric, and mediastinal lymph nodes. In two cases, there was synchronous involvement of separate lymph node groups (inguinal and cervical in one case and cervical and mediastinal in another case), whereas in a third patient there was synchronous involvement of the spleen and a paraaortic lymph node. Histologically, the lesions were characterized by a fibrosing/inflammatory process that showed marked heterogeneity and striking variation from case to case. Based on their histological features, the lesions could be classified into three different groups: Stage I was characterized by the appearance of single or multiple small foci containing a spindle cell proliferation admixed with a prominent inflammatory background, with complete preservation of the remainder of the nodal architecture; stage II was characterized by more diffuse involvement of the lymph node with a marked inflammatory response admixed with a prominent myofibroblastic proliferation leading to subtotal effacement of the nodal architecture, often with extension of the process beyond the capsule into perinodal fat; and stage III was characterized by almost complete replacement of the lymph node by diffuse sclerosis with scant residual inflammatory elements and total loss of the normal nodal architecture. Immunohistochemical studies in 20 cases showed a striking number of vimentin- and actin-positive myofibroblastic cells with moderate increase in CD20/CD45+ small lymphocytes and polyclonal plasma cells in the stage I lesions, the emergence of numerous CD68+ histiocytes admixed with lymphocytes, plasma cells, and abundant fibromyofibroblastic cells in the stage II lesions, and only few remaining scattered CD68+ histiocytes and fibroblasts in the stage III lesions. Our findings suggest that inflammatory pseudotumor of lymph node represents an evolving, dynamic process that may adopt different morphological appearances depending on its stage of evolution. Recognition of the various stages of this process may be of importance for differential diagnosis with other fibrosing/inflammatory conditions of lymph nodes.
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PMID:Inflammatory pseudotumor of lymph nodes: a study of 25 cases with emphasis on morphological heterogeneity. 904 98

A 67-year-old man with a 7-month history of dilated cardiomyopathy was admitted to our hospital because of general fatigue, shortness of breath, and anemia on laboratory examination. Increased blasts were observed in the bone marrow. The blasts were characterized by large cells with abundant, intensely basophilic, vacuolated cytoplasm, round nuclei, and prominent nucleoli. Chromosome analysis revealed a nonrandom t(8;22)(q24;q11) chromosomal abnormality, and surface-marker analysis disclosed a positive immunophenotype for CD10, CD19, CD20, CD38, HLA-DR, FMC7, and IgM-lambda. These findings yielded a diagnosis of L3 acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The patient was treated with chemotherapeutic agents. On the 39th hospital day, during hematologic recovery after induction therapy, abdominal pain developed. Abdominal X-ray films disclosed ileus with dilatation of the small bowel and Kerckring's folds. Conservative treatment was begun but the patient died. At autopsy, intestinal perforations were observed at a site 55 cm proximal to the ileocecal junction. A specimen of perforated tissue revealed a diffuse infiltration of leukemic cells through the small bowel wall. However, bone marrow specimens showed no signs of aggravation of leukemia.
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PMID:[Perforation of small intestinal during hematologic recovery in an elderly man after induction therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia L3]. 1072 45

Although the gastrointestinal tract represents the most common site of extranodal lymphoma, primary follicular lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract is an uncommon and poorly defined disease. We report the clinical and pathologic features of 26 patients with primary gastrointestinal follicular lymphoma. Ten of 26 patients (38.5%) were stage IIE, and 16 patients (61.5%) were stage IE. Of the 26 patients, 13 were female and 13 were male. The age range was 26-81 years (median 54.5 years). Abdominal pain was the most common presenting symptom, seen in 12 of 24 patients (50%). Nodularity of the mucosal surface was the most common endoscopic finding, seen in 10 of 14 patients (71.4%). The majority of cases (22 of 26, 84.6%) involved small bowel, four involved colorectum alone, and two involved the ileocecal valve. Within the small bowel the duodenum was the most commonly involved site (10 cases). Transmural involvement by follicular lymphoma was identified in 11 of the 16 patients who underwent surgical resection; five showed involvement of mucosa and submucosa only. The most common histologic grade was grade 1. Thirteen of 26 cases were grade 1, ten grade 2, and three grade 3. Twenty-one of 26 cases showed a predominantly follicular growth pattern, four mixed follicular and diffuse, and one predominantly diffuse. All cases were positive for CD20 and BCL2 and negative for CD3, CD5, CD23, CD43, and cyclin D1. Twenty-four of 26 were positive for CD10. Four of four cases showed cytogenetic or molecular genetic evidence of t(14;18). Initial treatment modalities included surgery plus chemotherapy (nine cases), surgery alone (seven cases), chemotherapy alone (four cases), observation alone (four cases), and chemotherapy and abdominal radiation (one case). One case presented with rectal polyps and was treated with polypectomy. A complete response was observed in 15 of 22 cases that received treatment, and of the 15 cases, five recurred 27-60 months after the initial diagnosis. Recurrence and progression were associated with histologic transformation to diffuse large cell lymphoma in one case. No significant correlation was identified between treatment response and various clinical and pathologic features. Overall, none of the 26 patients died of lymphoma. One patient died of a concomitant pancreatic carcinoma. Of the remaining 25 patients, 14 were disease free and 11 were alive with disease at a mean follow-up of 43 months. The estimated 5-year disease-free survival was 62%, and median disease-free survival was 69 months. The estimated 5-year relapse-free survival was 54%, and the median relapse-free survival was 63 months.
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PMID:Primary follicular lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract: a clinical and pathologic study of 26 cases. 1181 43

Although primary gastric malignant lymphoma accounts for slightly more than 10% of all lymphomas at extranodular sites, it is relatively rare clinically, representing only 1% of all malignant diseases of the stomach. In addition, most such diseases tend to be B-cell lymphoma, while T-cell lymphoma is extremely rare. We encountered a patient with primary gastric T-cell malignant lymphoma who, although demonstrating a very rare phenomenon, was negative for antihuman T-lymphotropic virus type 1 antibody. A 73-year-old man was admitted to the hospital with the chief complaint of upper abdominal pain. The primary lesion was a type 3 tumor located at the cardia to the posterior wall of the upper body of the stomach, which had invaded the tail of the pancreas and a part of the transverse colon. A total gastrectomy, pancreatosplenectomy, and partial resection of the transverse colon were performed. The surgical section contained a giant ulcerative lesion with its bank cleaved, and a histological examination revealed a diffuse, small cell (Lymphoma Study Group classification) malignant lymphoma. An immunohistochemical analysis of the surgical specimen was positive for LCA/CD45, UCLH-1/CD45RO, and Leu-4/CD3, and negative for L-26/CD20, and it was diagnosed to be primary gastric T-cell malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Primary gastric T-cell lymphoma without human T-lymphotropic virus type 1: report of a case. 1210 80

Interdigitating dendritic cell sarcoma (IDCS) is an aggressive neoplasm of which fewer than 25 cases have been reported in the world literature. This malignancy is difficult to diagnose because of its rarity, and because of the subtle histopathologic features that distinguish IDCS from similar tumors arising from reticular cells. To date, there exists no consensus on a standard chemotherapeutic regimen for IDCS. Patients with this malignancy have been treated with chemotherapy regimens used against non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Responses to these regimens have been variable, but mostly unsuccessful. In this article we describe a case of IDCS occurring in a 44 year old female who presented with abdominal pain and inguinal adenopathy. Staging of the tumor with CT scan, PET scan, and bone marrow biopsy demonstrated inguinal and abdominal lymphadenopathies, a large mass encasing the small bowel, and extensive liver infiltration. Morphologic and cytochemical analysis of biopsies from the abdominal mass and inguinal node were consistent with a diagnosis of IDCS, and immunohistochemical stains of the lymph node were positive for CLA, Kp-1, S-100, while negative for CD1a, CD3, CD20, CKER, and HMB45. Treatment of this patient with ABVD chemotherapy resulted in rapid clinical improvement with a marked decrease in tumor burden after two cycles of ABVD, and a complete response after six cycles of therapy.
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PMID:Interdigitating dendritic cell sarcoma: a rare malignancy responsive to ABVD chemotherapy. 1215 70

We report here a case of primary colorectal T-cell lymphoma in a 49-year-old man. Eighteen years previously, he was diagnosed as having ulcerative colitis based on the findings of colonoscopy and a barium enema. Since then, he had been treated with salicylazosulfapyridine until the most recent episode. He was refered to our clinic with the chief complaint of abdominal pain and excretion of mucus, and for a workup of bowel lesions. Physical examination results were not remarkable, except for the presence of low-grade fever. Total colonoscopy showed multiple shallow ulcers and aphthoid erosions through the entire colon and rectum, except for the descending colon. Endoscopic findings of the descending colon were normal, which was different from the findings of the active stage of ulcerative colitis. Biopsy specimens from the colon and rectum with ulcerations and aphthoid erosions showed a diffuse proliferation of medium-sized to large atypical lymphoid cells with irregular and indistinct nucleoli, thus revealing malignant lymphoma, diffuse pleomorphic type. The lymphoma cells were positive for CD2, CD3, CD5, CD8, and T-cell receptor (TCR) beta F1, but negative for CD4, CD19, CD20, CD103, and CD56. Southern blotting revealed rearrangement of TCR. Based on these findings, the patient was diagnosed as having high-grade T-cell lymphoma. The findings of computerized tomography of the chest and abdomen, gallium scintigraphy, and abdominal ultrasonography were all normal. There were no abdominal lesions throughout the esophagus, stomach, duodenum, and small intestine. As the patient refused total proctocolectomy, he was treated with one course of CHOP (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, adriamycin, and prednisolone) and subsequently with three courses of ProMACE-CytaBOM (consisting of cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, etoposide, cytarabine, bleomycin, vincristine, methotrexate, and prednisolone). After the therapy, improvement of the colorectal lesions was observed, though lesions clearly still remained. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of primary colorectal T-cell lymphoma with cytotoxic/suppressor T-cell phenotype.
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PMID:Primary colorectal T-cell lymphoma. 1274 79


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