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Query: UMLS:C0001418 (
adenocarcinoma
)
68,496
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum Ribonuclease (RNase, EC. 3. 1. 4. 22) of normal persons and of patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, or pancreatic cancer was determined with poly (C) as substrate. Strikingly abnormal elevations occured in the serum RNase of patients with pancreatic cancer (p less than 0.001). Average serum RNase values of 18 normal persons, 10 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
and 26 patients with pancreatic cancer were 92, 118, and 249 units, respectively. In patients with pancreatic cancer, we compared the RNase level with four histologic types (ductar cell
adenocarcinoma
, anaplastic cell carcinoma, acinar cell carcinoma, and islet cell carcinoma).
Adenocarcinoma
showed higher activity than the other histologic types (p less than 0.005). When we compared the serum of pancreatic cancer and pancreatic cancer tumor extract with normal serum and normal pancreas extract, strikingly different phosphocellulose chromatographic pattern were evident. The correlation of increased serum RNase levels with tumor histology and different chromatographic pattern may explain the new enzyme production in cancer patients, and have biological significance in the development of pancreatic cancer.
...
PMID:Serum ribonucleases in pancreatic cancer: relation to tumor histology. 21 87
All confirmed cases of pancreatic carcinoma in bona fida residents of Olmsted County, Minnesota, from 1935 through 1974 were identified and reviewed. The average annual age-adjusted incidence rates were 7.4 for males and 3.5 for females per 100,000 population. Rates increased with age for both sexes and increased slightly over the 40-year period of study, with lower incidence rates observed for rural inhabitants in the first 2 decades. At the time of diagnosis, almost 75% of patients were 60 years of age or older and
adenocarcinoma
was histologically identified in 92% of the cases. One-year survival was 11%, and all patients died within 3 years of the initial diagnosis. An association between pancreatic carcinoma and diabetes was noted. There does not appear to be a clear association with cholelithiasis or
chronic pancreatitis
. There was a high percentage (20%) of multiple primary carcinomas and an overrepresentation of metal workers observed among patients with pancreatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:Cancer of the pancreas in Olmsted County, Minnesota, 1935-1974. 42 4
Circulating CEA levels were determined in 102 patients wtih histologically proven pancreatic carcinoma and 26 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
. In the group with pancreatic carcinoma eleven patients had resectable tumors, the mean CEA in the nonjaundiced patients was 10 +/- 5 ng/ml while the mean value in jaundiced patients in this group was 27 +/- 40. Thirty-four patients with nonmetastatic locally unresectable disease had a mean serum CEA of 25 +/- 52 with a range of 1 to 250 ng/ml. Twenty-one percent had values of 5 ng/ml or less. The mean value in 57 patients with metastatic disease was 97 +/- 194 with a range of 0.05 to 1000 ng/ml and 19 percent had values of 5 ng/ml or less. Survival of patients with locally unresectable or metastatic carcinoma was significantly longer in those patients who had a normal CEA at the time of diagnosis. Circulating CEA in the metastatic group was much lower in patients with nonhepatic metastases as well as in those with well differentiated
adenocarcinoma
histology. Twenty-three patients with
chronic pancreatitis
and normal serum bilirubin had a mean CEA value of 5.3 +/- 4 ng/ml with 65% of values being 5 ng/ml or less but the CEA ranged from 4.6 to 27 in three who were jaundiced.
...
PMID:Circulating carcinoembryonic antigen in pancreatic carcinoma. 70 16
A 35-year-old man underwent a pancreatoduodenectomy for what proved to be
chronic pancreatitis
. He did well until 14 years later, when he presented with right upper quadrant pain and jaundice. At laparotomy, an
adenocarcinoma
was found in fibrous tissue obstructing the choledochoenteric anastomosis. The exact origin of the tumor, from pancreas or biliary tract, could not be ascertained. This case points out the difficulties in attempting to diagnose the etiology of jaundice in a patient who has had a pancreatoduodenectomy without doing a laparotomy. The importance of this diagnosis lies in the known occurrence of benign strictures at the choledochojejunostomy site after a pancreatoduodenectomy.
...
PMID:Occurrence of an adenocarcinoma at the choledochoenteric anastomosis 14 years after pancreatoduodenectomy for benign disease. 83 May 84
This study involved 14 cases or pleural effusions or ascites rich in amylase and unrelated to
chronic pancreatitis
, a pseudo-cyst of the pancreas or acute pancreatitis. A pleural effusion rich in amylase may be secondary to a pancreatic neoplasm but this possibility seems rare. Amylase-containing effusions related to a nonpancreatic neoplasm are more common. The lesion is in general an advanced pleuro-pulmonary carcinoma, frequently an
adenocarcinoma
. The amylase activity of neoplastic effusion fluid is significantly increased but although levels similar to those of certain pancreatic effusions may be seen, very high figures would appear to be rare. Finally, two cases of amylase-rich pleural effusions were related to a pleuro-digestive fistula and one left-sided effusion was secondary to abdominal trauma.
...
PMID:[Effusions rich in amylase without pancreatitis. 14 cases]. 99 7
Chronic pancreatitis
and carcinoma of the pancreas are being diagnosed with increasing frequency throughout the world. When both occur together, the question of their causal relationship arises. Secondary
chronic pancreatitis
following carcinoma of the pancreas is relatively frequent and can be proven histologically in at least 10% of pancreatic cancers. How often primary
chronic pancreatitis
develops into carcinoma is controversial. So far, there are only a few prospective clinical studies of
chronic pancreatitis
which cover this problem. We have followed 146 cases of
chronic pancreatitis
for an average of 8.7 years. Two thirds of our patients show pancreatic calcifications. Our series includes a family with congenital pancreatic insufficiency. So far only one
adenocarcinoma
of the head of the pancreas has been diagnosed in a 58-year-old male. Another 57-year-old male patient died from a solid metastatic carcinoma, probably of pancreatic origin. Therefore, the incidence of pancreatic cancer in our series is 0.7 and 1.4% respectively. However, 8 more patients suffering from extrapancreatic malignancies have turned up during the follow-up period: 2 cancers of the tongue, 2 colonic carcinomas, 2 bladder papillomas, and 1 bronchial and 1 gastric carcinoma. Our studies indicate that carcinoma of the pancreas probably does not occur more frequently in chronic non-hereditary pancreatitis than in the average population. A review of the literature suggests that there may be a higher incidence of carcinoma in families with hereditary
chronic pancreatitis
. The frequency of extrapancreatic cancer in our patients is remarkable. As pancreatic carcinoma is rare in
chronic pancreatitis
there is no reason for early aggressive surgery, e.g. pancreatectomy, in these patients.
...
PMID:[Pancreatic carcinoma in chronic pancreatitis]. 114 57
To obtain a histopathologic diagnosis at the site of a biliary obstruction, we recently have performed 24 cases of biliary biopsy using gastrofiberscopic biopsy forceps (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) via transhepatic tracts provided in the course of the procedure of percutaneous biliary drainage. Histopathologic diagnosis was successfully made at the first attempt of biopsy procedure but a second trial was made a week later in 6 cases who were negative for malignant cells on the first attempt. The histological results from the biopsy specimens were 18 adenocarcinomas, 5 chronic inflammations and one normal epithelium. Of 6 cases who were negative for malignant cells on forceps biopsy specimen, three cases were confirmed as
adenocarcinoma
of the ampulla of Vater, adenocarcinoma of the pancreas and
chronic pancreatitis
by surgical biopsy. The latter was a true negative result, which was diagnosed as chronic inflammation on forceps biopsy and verified as
chronic pancreatitis
by surgery. The remaining two cases were diagnosed as malignant obstructive jaundice by clinical and radiological follow-up findings. Major complications (bile peritonitis, bleeding, and hemopneumothorax) occurred in 3 patients, which mainly arose in the earlier period of study. This procedure can be performed at the same time as percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage with low morbidity or mortality, and although the potential for perforation of bile ducts and injury to adjacent blood vessels is considered it is a useful addition to existing biopsy techniques for yielding material sufficient for histologic analysis.
...
PMID:Percutaneous transhepatic biliary biopsy using gastrofiberscopic biopsy forceps. 129 35
We report the morphonuclear characteristics of normal (13 cases), benign (ie, chronic) pancreatitis (six cases), and neoplastic (ie, ductal)
adenocarcinoma
(22 cases) tissues of the pancreas. This description is based on computerized cell image analysis, which permits the determination of parameters related to the morphometric (nuclear area), densitometric (nuclear DNA content), and chromatin texture features of Feulgen-stained nuclei from paraffin-embedded archival material. We observed that nuclear area discriminates between normal and benign (ie,
chronic pancreatitis
) as opposed to neoplastic cell nuclei. Morphonuclear parameters describing chromatin pattern characteristics made it possible to discriminate between grade I pancreatic carcinoma and normal and benign cell nuclei on the one hand, and grades I and III carcinoma on the other hand. The nuclear DNA content increased in a continuous manner from normal and benign through low-grade to high-grade neoplastic tissues of the pancreas. Combining the morphometric, densitometric, and textural parameters into one equation, we were able to calculate a score (ie, the malignancy level index) that showed a close relationship to conventional histopathologic grading. Thus, the computer-aided diagnosis of cytologic specimens from pancreatic lesions offers information of the same significance as that obtained by conventional histopathologic grading.
...
PMID:Computerized morphonuclear characteristics and DNA content of adenocarcinoma of the pancreas, chronic pancreatitis, and normal tissues: relationship with histopathologic grading. 142 50
Magnetic resonance imaging (MR) was performed in 14 healthy subjects and 16 patients with pancreatic disease. All the 16 patients were subjected to ultrasonography (USG), computed tomography (CT) and MR while endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) was performed in 10 cases. In one patients with
adenocarcinoma
and two with gastrinoma, MR demonstrated abnormalities while USG and CT were normal. MR was, however, inferior to ERCP in demonstrating ductal abnormalities in
chronic pancreatitis
. Our initial experience suggests that MR is superior to other imaging modalities in the diagnosis and staging of pancreatic tumors; however, it is inferior to ERCP in the diagnosis of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in pancreatic diseases: comparison with other imaging techniques. 142 31
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and its ligands are thought to be important in the control of proliferation of many epithelial systems, including the exocrine pancreas. Abnormalities in expression of two of the known ligands of the EGFR, transforming growth factor alpha and epidermal growth factor, occur frequently in ductal
adenocarcinoma
of the human pancreas. We have examined an archival series of cases of pancreatic pathology for expression of the EGFR using the anti-EGFR antiserum 12E and found that there is almost ubiquitous overexpression of EGFR in pancreatic cancer and in
chronic pancreatitis
. Southern blot analysis showed no evidence of amplification or rearrangement of the EGFR gene. We conclude that an autocrine loop involving the EGFR system may be involved in the genesis of both neoplasia and reactive hyperplasia of pancreatic ductal epithelium.
...
PMID:The epidermal growth factor receptor in human pancreatic cancer. 153 76
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