Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reviewed 26 examples of the rare variant of cervical adenocarcinoma that has been designated "adenoma malignum." The patients, three of whom had Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, ranged in age from 25 to 72 years (average, 42 years). The most common presenting symptom was menometrorrhagia, followed by vaginal discharge, postmenopausal bleeding, and abdominal swelling in decreasing order of frequency. In 12 of the patients, the diagnosis was established on the basis of the examination of a cervical biopsy specimen, endocervical curettage specimen, or both. In three of these cases, however, up to four biopsies were performed before the diagnosis was established. In the remaining 14 patients, the diagnosis was not made until the time of operation or pathologic examination of a hysterectomy specimen. On gross examination, the cervix usually appeared abnormal, but occasional specimens were considered unremarkable. The cervix was typically described as firm or indurated. Microscopic examination showed glands that were irregular in size and shape and lined predominantly by mucin-containing columnar epithelial cells with basal nuclei. The tumors typically exhibited deep invasion of the cervical wall, and a portion of the infiltrating tumor was associated with a stromal response in most cases. Minor foci of tumor with a less well-differentiated appearance were present in 15 of the 26 tumors. Argyrophil cells were present in six of 15 tumors. Five of the six tumors containing argyrophil cells stained immunohistochemically for serotonin and peptide hormones. Positive staining for serotonin was seen in four tumors; one of these also contained a few cells positive for neurotensin. Cytoplasmic staining of the tumor cells for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) was seen in five of six cases. CEA reactivity was very focal in two of the positive tumors. Microscopic features that were most helpful in distinguishing adenoma malignum from normal endocervix or benign endocervical glandular proliferations were the presence of markedly irregular, abnormally shaped glands; invasion of the cervical wall; a loose edematous or desmoplastic stromal response; foci of less well-differentiated tumor; vascular invasion; perineural invasion; and positive staining for CEA. Despite radical therapy in most of the cases, the prognosis was poor. Follow-up data were available for 22 patients. Thirteen of them died of recurrent tumor, four were alive with recurrent tumor at the time of last follow-up examination, and only three patients were disease free for 2 years or more.4+ tumor of the
...
PMID:Adenoma malignum (minimal deviation adenocarcinoma) of the uterine cervix. A clinicopathological and immunohistochemical analysis of 26 cases. 276 21

An acid extract of a human neuroendocrine pancreatic adenoma was found to contain very high concentrations of immunoreactive neurotensin (iNT; approximately 130 mumol/L) as well as immunoreactive neuromedin-N (iNMN; approximately 40 mumol/L), portions of which (iNT, 0.2%; iNMN, 30%) were found in large molecular forms. Processing of the large forms could be mimicked by treatment with pepsin, which increased their immunoreactivity 15- to 20-fold (iNT) and 1- to 2-fold (iNMN), liberating a peptide similar to NMN and 2 fragments of NT [primary product, NT-(4-13)]. Biochemical characterizations using gel electrophoresis, isoelectric focusing, and high pressure liquid chromatography indicated that the large forms were highly basic (pI 8.5-9.5) proteins with a mol wt of about 20K (78% of the total), 45K (8%), and 60K (4%). The 20K protein contained iNT and iNMN in a 1:1 ratio, while a slightly smaller species contained only NMN. These results are in agreement with cDNA studies of canine intestinal mRNA, indicating the presence of a 170-amino acid precursor containing 1 copy each of NT and NMN. They further indicate that within this tumor differential processing of precursor occurred, resulting in a NT to NMN ratio of about 3:1, with additional NMN stored in large molecular forms.
...
PMID:Presence of neurotensin and neuromedin-N within a common precursor from a human pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. 313 83

Carcinoid tumors of the middle ear are rare, with only three previously reported cases. The authors report the light and electron microscopic and immunohistochemical features of two carcinoid tumors that occurred in a 34-year-old female and a 21-year-old male. Both presented with unilateral hearing loss. By light microscopic examination, both were characterized by trabecula of tall columnar cells with basal nuclei and no mitotic activity. Electron microscopic examination demonstrated large numbers of pleomorphic neurosecretory granules, perinuclear aggregates of intermediate filaments, cell junctions, and surface microvillous processes. Some cells contained intermediate filaments forming tonofilaments and lacked secretory granules. These cells stained for cytokeratin by immunoperoxidase and separated the neuroendocrine cells from the underlying basal lamina. The cells in this tumor stained for the molluscan cardioexcitatory peptide. Cells in both tumors also stained for pancreatic polypeptide. Neither case stained for lysozyme, insulin, glucagon, somatastatin, gastrin, substance P, thyroid-stimulating hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, Met-enkephalin, Leu-enkephalin, neuropeptide Y, peptide YY, neurotensin, Bombesin, serotonin, neuron-specific enolose, glial and neural filaments, S-100 protein, cholecystokinin, beta-endorphin, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin, luteinizing hormone/follicle-stimulating hormone, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, prolactin or calcitonin. Carcinoid tumor of the middle ear can be distinguished from paraganglioma and middle ear adenoma.
...
PMID:Carcinoid tumors of the middle ear. 357 33

In a pancreatic adenoma approximately 78.7% of the endocrine cells reacted specifically with antisera to neurotensin, 17.5% to gastrin, 2.8% to pancreatic polypeptide, and 1% to glucagon. The electron microscope revealed that the majority of the endocrine cells were N-cells--morphologically similar to the ileal N-cells which are known to represent the neurotensin-producing cells. Neurotensin was extracted from the tumor and identified by Sephadex, ion-exchange, and high-pressure liquid chromatography. Gastrin, pancreatic polypeptide, and glucagon cells were also identified by the electron microscope; the peptides were extracted and demonstrated by chromatography. The serum concentrations of these hormones were elevated. After total gastrectomy which was necessary because of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, a jejunoesophageal alkaline reflux, reaching the upper esophagus appeared. As intravenous infusion of synthetic neurotensin in rats caused an increase of luminal enteric pressure, it is suggested that severe jejunoesophageal reflux after gastrectomy may be a clinical feature of a neurotensinoma.
...
PMID:A multihormonal tumor of the pancreas producing neurotensin. 730 61

The GH secretagogue (GHS) receptor (GHS-R) has been characterized and cloned. It is a member of a family of seven transmembrane receptors and is closely related to the neurotensin and TRH receptors. To determine the expression of this receptor in normal anterior pituitary and in 24 human pituitary adenomas, we analyzed GHS-R messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) using a RT-PCR assay. We found that normal human pituitary was positive for the GHS-R signal. In addition, all GH-secreting adenomas and the one TSH-secreting adenoma demonstrated the presence of GHS-R mRNA. Three of four ACTH-secreting tumors and three of nine gonadotroph adenomas were also positive for the GHS-R mRNA. To determine the amounts of GHS-R mRNA in normal pituitary and in representative tumors, semiquantitative competitive PCR was performed. We determined that normal pituitary had approximately 750 molecules/L GHS-R mRNA. The acromegalic tumor had approximately 1.5 x 10(5) molecules/L, and the TSH-secreting tumor had approximately 7.5 x 10(3) molecules/L. Other tumor types contained considerably less, with the ACTH-secreting and gonadotroph tumors expressing 7.5 x 10(2) and 3 x 10(2) GHS-R mRNA molecules/L, respectively. These results suggest that GH- and TSH-producing adenomas express GHS-R mRNA at levels 200 and 10 times higher, respectively, than the normal pituitary, and that this receptor expression may be involved in the pathogenesis and growth of these pituitary adenomas.
...
PMID:Growth hormone secretagogue receptor expression in human pituitary tumors. 985 70

We describe the clinical, histological, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopical features of 9 tumors fulfilling the criteria of the so-called hyalinizing trabecular adenoma (HTA) of the thyroid. Six tumors had the characteristic histology of HTA throughout, whereas in the remaining 3 tumors the classic pattern was identified focally in otherwise typical or atypical follicular adenomas. In one case, there was a focus of tumoral tissue outside the capsule, and in another there was a regional lymph node metastasis. Seven tumors were immunoreactive for thyroglobulin and cytokeratins, 1 tumor was positive for thyroglobulin and negative for cytokeratins, and another was negative for thyroglobulin and positive for cytokeratins. Scattered cells immunoreactive for neurotensin and somatostatin were found in 2 cases. Every tumor stained for S100 protein and neuron-specific enolase, but none showed immunoreactivity for calcitonin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, or chromogranin. The irregularity of the nuclear contours, the prominence of the cytoplasmic bundles of intermediate filaments, and the accumulation of basal lamina material around the neoplastic cells without the interposition of a well-defined basal lamina were the most distinctive electron microscopical features. The cytogenetic study performed in one case revealed, apart from cells with a normal karyotype, two abnormal clones: one with a translocation of chromosomes 2-3 and another with the same translocation and trisomies of chromosomes 7 and 12. Our results show that most HTAs display follicular cell differentiation and very low clinical aggressiveness. They also show that some HTAs are able to coexpress follicular cell and neuroendocrine markers and may behave like malignant neoplasms. We conclude that hyalinizing trabecular tumor is a more appropriate generic term than HTA to designate this relatively heterogenous group of lesions of the thyroid gland.
...
PMID:Hyalinizing trabecular adenoma: A misnomer for a peculiar tumor of the thyroid gland. 3213 92