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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A review of the literature discloses 56 cases of bronchial
adenoma
in children under the age of 16 years; we now report two additional cases. The diagnosis of bronchial
adenoma
in children is often delayed due to erroneous interpretation of the secondary manifestations of pneumonitis, fever, or
wheezing
. These tumors should be considered potentially malignant, since local invasion and metastasis have been reported in this age group. Treatment is by thoracotomy with total excision of the lesion.
...
PMID:Bronchial adenoma in childhood. Two case reports and review of literature. 125 39
Twenty one patients with bronchial
adenoma
, treated surgically in our hospital, include three different neoplasms: carcinoid, cylindroma and mucoepidermoid
adenoma
. In this series, clinical characteristics were: bronchial obstruction when the tumor protrudes into the lumen and infection, first in the bronchus (bronchitis or bronchiectasis) then in the parenchyma (acute, recurrent or chronic pneumonia, tension abscess). Ball-valve action of the tumor may result in lobar or segmental emphysema. Preoperatively, most of the patients had been misdiagnosed as bronchitis, carcinoma of lung, bronchiectasis or acute tension abscess. In our series, all the patients were alive in a follow up of 2-8 years. Yet one patient is living with local recurrence and distant metastasis. To our experience, pneumonia recurring in the same area of the lung, localized
wheezing
, with or without endocrine symptoms, lobar or segmental emphysema may suggest bronchial
adenoma
. Tomography and endoscopy are important for diagnosis. For the treatment, sleeve resection of the main bronchus was done in 2, bronchoplastic lobectomy in 7, lobectomy in 10, and pneumonectomy in 2. Sleeve resection of the main bronchus or bronchoplastic lobectomy is recommended as a reliable procedure for this disease.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and surgical treatment of bronchial adenoma]. 282 Jun 82
Eight patients in whom new respiratory symptoms developed following pulmonary resection have been evaluated. The bronchial stumps in all of these patients had been closed with Tevdec suture material. The total number of pulmonary resections using Tevdec suture from January, 1971, to January, 1980, was 180, yielding an incidence of the complication of 4.4%. No patient had empyema or bronchopleural fistula. Symptoms included nonproductive cough (eight patients), hemoptysis (five patients),
wheezing
(two patients), and coughing up suture material (two patients). The underlying disease necessitating pulmonary resection was carcinoma in five patients, carcinoid
adenoma
in one patient, tuberculosis in one patient, and bronchiectasis in one patient. The median time interval between resection and development of respiratory symptoms was 18 months, with a range of 8 to 57 months. The chest roentgenograms showed no change from earlier postoperative films. Bronchoscopy under general anesthesia was performed in all eight patients. Granulation tissue around loosened Tevdec sutures was present in all patients so examined. No residual tumor or specific infection was identified. Immediate and sustained relief of symptoms was obtained in seven of eight patients by removal of the loosened sutures. One patient has had recurrence of minor hemoptysis 18 months following suture removal but has refused further endoscopy. Stainless steel staples have been used for bronchial stump closure in over 100 pulmonary resections since 1977 and no such complications have been seen.
...
PMID:Bronchoscopic diagnosis and treatment of bronchial stump suture granulomas. 720 61
In a review of pulmonary tumors diagnosed at our institute from 1976 to 1995, we found 20 malignant and 12 benign rare tumors, which accounted for 0.57 and 0.34% of all pulmonary tumors, respectively. The histological types of these rare malignant tumors were malignant lymphoma (6/20), carcinosarcoma (3/20), mucoepidermoid carcinoma (2/20), bronchial gland mixed tumor (2/20), adenocystic carcinoma (1/20), myoepithelioma (1/20), leiomyosarcoma (1/20), epitheloid hemangioendothelioma (1/20), hemangiopericytoma (1/20), malignant melanoma (1/20) and choriocarcinoma (1/20). Benign rare tumors involved papilloma (3/12), lipoma (3/12), leiomyoma (3/12),
adenoma
(1/12), fibroma (1/12), and meningioma (1/12). The clinical and pathological features of malignant tumors were roughly the same as those of common pulmonary carcinomas. In contrast, benign tumors were never larger than 3 cm and were more commonly located in the central parts of the lung, which explained the relatively frequent symptoms of
wheezing
and fever associated with obstructive pneumonia.
...
PMID:Rare pulmonary tumors - a review of 32 cases. 973 21