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Query: UMLS:C0007095 (
carcinoid
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Use of the biofragmentable anastomosis ring (BAR) was attempted in 33 patients at two New York City institutions and employed in 31 instances. Anastomoses performed were end-to-end enterocolic (n = 15), colocolic (n = 15), and side-to-side colocolic (n = 1). Patients ranged in age from 27 to 86 years, with the following diagnoses: primary colon cancer, 15; sessile adenoma, four; colostomy, five; diverticulosis, two; metastatic cancer with obstruction, multiple polyposis, perforated appendiceal mass, malignant
carcinoid
of appendix, intussuscepting right colon mass, one each. In two instances use of the device was aborted because of concern with the blood supply to the bowel wall in one and tissue edema in another. The average duration of postoperative ileus was 4.7 days. Two patients were subsequently treated for small
bowel obstruction
thought unrelated to use of the anastomotic device. There were no deaths and no evidence of stricture.
...
PMID:Murphy's Button revisited. Clinical experience with the biofragmentable anastomotic ring. 842 5
Most
carcinoid
primary tumors are small and do not cause symptoms until complications (e.g.
intestinal obstruction
) or symptoms and signs of the carcinoid syndrome occur. Therefore in most cases an assessment of the primary tumor and its metastases must be performed. To determine the value of somatostatin receptor scintigraphy (SRS) for localizing
carcinoid
tumors, we compared the results of SRS with those obtained with computed tomography (CT) and ultrasonography (US) in 22 patients who had not undergone surgery for removal of the primary tumor. We could not find an advantage of SRS over CT and US for detecting the primary lesions. Tumors > 2 cm in diameter were regularly detected using all methods. SRS was not superior to CT or US for the detection of liver metastases. SRS showed the liver metastases in 16 of 18 patients, whereas CT and US detected liver metastases in all patients. For localization of extrahepatic abdominal and extraabdominal metastases (lymph nodes, bone), whole-body SRS showed an advantage over CT and US. We conclude that SRS is not superior to CT or US for localization of primary
carcinoid
tumors or liver metastases, although it did prove successful for visualizing extrahepatic and extraabdominal tumor spread. Additionally, SRS is useful for identifying receptor-positive metastases that may be treated by somatostatin analogs. Thus SRS should be performed in patients with a known
carcinoid
tumor, except those with an appendiceal
carcinoid
measuring < 1 cm in diameter.
...
PMID:Value of somatostatin receptor scintigraphy for preoperative localization of carcinoids. 866 12
Liver metastases imply a major problem in patients with
carcinoid
tumors. Patients with localized disease should always undergo resection for cure. Patients with distant metastatic disease can also undergo resection for potential cure or symptom palliation because of the slow growth rate of many
carcinoid
tumors. In patients with the midgut carcinoid syndrome and bilobar hepatic disease we have performed primary surgery to relieve such symptoms as
intestinal obstruction
and ischemia, followed by successive embolizations of the hepatic arteries to reduce functional tumor burden in the liver. For optimal palliation, all patients with residual tumor were treated by octreotide. In a consecutive series of 64 patients with the midgut carcinoid syndrome we thus attained a 5-year survival rate of 70%. Fourteen of the patients underwent intentionally curative surgery (e.g., primary surgery followed by liver surgery). Of these patients, none died from their tumor disease during the period of study. The value of adjunctive interferon therapy is currently under evaluation.
...
PMID:Treatment of liver metastases of carcinoid tumors. 866 17
A total of 121 consecutive patients with midgut
carcinoid
tumors underwent regular clinical control and 158 laparotomies for abdominal symptoms with 1 to 11 years (mean 5.2 years) of follow-up. Metastases were present in 93% of the patients at study inclusion and developed at initially uninvolved sites with an overall probability of 0.38. Patients without initial tumor spread developed mesenteric or liver metastases with the probability of 0.25 (mean delay 12 years), whereas those with mesenteric metastases exhibited a probability 0.56 to develop liver metastases (mean delay 6.1 years). Spread to extraabdominal sites in patients with mesenteric and liver metastases exhibited a probability of 0.22 (mean delay 4.3 years), and this spread was especially frequent (probability 0.60) in patients with only liver metastases at inclusion. Patients without the carcinoid syndrome (52%) mainly suffered from more or less episodic abdominal pain, nausea, and diarrhea. Marked mesenteric fibrosis detected at surgery (n = 59) generally was accompanied by symptoms of abdominal pain and weight loss, and it often required urgent intervention due to
intestinal obstruction
or ischemia. Complete or partial symptom alleviation was accomplished in 82% of the operated patients, and generally was most auspicious after primary acute or subacute procedures (n = 54). The complete or partial symptom improvements after surgery lasted for mean 5.3 years and tended to be longer after elective (n = 50) than acute operations. The findings substantiate encouraging results of laparotomy in a compromised cohort of patients with midgut
carcinoid
tumors. Because the patients also displayed a generally slow progression of metastases, liberal indications for laparotomy should prevail in symptomatic and possibly also asymptomatic individuals with midgut
carcinoid
tumors.
...
PMID:Progression of metastases and symptom improvement from laparotomy in midgut carcinoid tumors. 867 69
Carcinoid tumors
are among the most frequently neuroendocrine neoplasms of the gastrointestinal tract. They occur more commonly as benign diseases but malignant ones can also be found. The peak age incidence varies with the location of the tumor, with appendiceal tumors being diagnosed at an overage of 36 years, whereas non appendiceal tumors are found typically in the fifth sixth decades of life. There is no sex predilection of the tumors. Most
carcinoid
tumors are found within the appendix (40-50%) or small intestine (25%). Less common sites include the rectum (15%), main bronchus (10%), duodenum (3-8%) and stomach (2%). Most
carcinoid
tumors are found incidentally at operation and cause no symptoms. If symptoms do occur, they can be either non specific include intermittent crampy abdominal pain, vomiting and distension caused by
intestinal obstruction
. The prognosis depends on the site of the tumor and its size. Most
carcinoid
tumors (75%) are less than 1 cm in size and only 5% are greater than 2 cm. The incidence of metastatic disease is related directly to the size of the tumor at all locations.
Carcinoid tumor
with size less than 1 cm give linfonodal metastasis only in 3-5%; the other with size over 2 cm give metastasis in the 70-75% of the cases. The 5-years survival for all
carcinoid
tumors are approximately 85%. Five years rate is higher (> 80%) in
carcinoid
tumors of appendix and rectum than in gastroduodenal, ileal and colonic neoplasm (< 60%). In this paper the authors report a case of malignant
carcinoid
of the duodenum.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of gastrointestinal carcinoid. Report of a clinical case with duodenal site]. 914 19
Small bowel tumors (SBT) are rare neoplasms and represent less than 10% of all gastrointestinal tumors. The majority of them are benign and discovered at the time of autopsy. However of those who present symptoms the majority belong to the group of malignant tumors and require of treatment. The most common histological variety are the adenocarcinoma and the
carcinoid
tumors. Abdominal pain,
intestinal obstruction
or gastrointestinal bleeding are the most common clinical complaints. Endoscopy or contrast X-ray examination are the most common forms of diagnosis and surgery remain the best way of treatment chemotherapy or radiotherapy are used in combination with surgery according to the histological diagnosis, the survival depends to the final histological report. A review of the experience at the National Institute of Cancer in Mexico city was performed and 34 patients were found with the diagnosis of SBT of which the majority presented with abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and abdominal distension. The most common histological diagnosis were the adenocarcinoma (52%) and the leiomyosarcoma (32%). Surgery was the most common form of treatment (73%) of which in 20% distant metastasis was diagnosed. Only nine are alive at the time of the report without recurrent disease with a mean follow up of 7 months. Our experience shows that SBT are rare neoplasms, the majority are diagnosed late but surgery remain the best way of treatment because it can offer the possibility of cure or adequate palliation with derivative procedures.
...
PMID:[Tumors of the small intestine]. 948 May 23
The appearance of ectopic pancreas on computed tomography (CT) is described in a 47-year-old man with
bowel obstruction
. The enhancement pattern of ectopic pancreas after intravenous iodine contrast administration is the same as that of leiomyoma or
carcinoid
. This CT finding has not been reported previously to our knowledge.
...
PMID:CT appearance of ectopic pancreas: a case report. 956 8
Four cases of
carcinoid
tumors of the vermiform appendix are reported. Clinical presentation in 3 cases was suggestive of acute appendicitis and they were submitted to appendicectomy. The
carcinoid
tumor was discovered by the pathologist on specimen of appendix. The tumors's size, less than 2 cm, the absence of serosal involvement and lymphatics invasion suggested that simple appendicectomy was a satisfactory treatment for such patients. Occasionally clinical presentation of appendiceal
carcinoid
is characterized by symptoms of
intestinal obstruction
or intussusception, palpable mass, bleeding. In the fourth patient, that had symptoms consistent with ileal occlusion, we found at laparotomy a bulky tumor of the base of appendix infiltrating and obstructing the cecum and right colon, without liver metastases. A right hemicolectomy with end-to-end anastomosis was performed. Aggressive behaviour of this tumor was also revealed by the single pulmonary metastasis, finding very uncommon in
carcinoid
of appendix. This patient died postoperatively, at 25th day, of septic abdominal complications, secondary to anastomotic leak. The former patients at clinical and radiological (CT scan) follow-up performed at 3, 12, 36 months respectively, are still alive and disease free.
...
PMID:[Carcinoid of the appendix. Observations on 4 cases]. 978 Jun 37
The diagnosis of adenocarcinoid (mucinous/goblet cell
carcinoid
) is usually unexpected by both clinicians and pathologists. We report here the case of a 74-year-old man with gastric lymphoma (B-cell MALToma) diagnosed by endoscopy, who was found on exploratory laparotomy also to have extensive intraabdominal involvement by adenocarcinoid, arising from the ileum and/or appendix. The patient died two years after diagnosis with bladder outlet and small
bowel obstruction
due to diffuse metastases. In addition to mucin positivity, immunohistochemical stains demonstrated the tumor to be positive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, serotonin, gastrin, and glucagon. Of histogenetic interest, some individual neoplastic cells appeared to be positive for both mucin and chromogranin, and this was confirmed by the electron microscopic finding of microvilli, intracytoplasmic mucin droplets, and neurosecretory granules involving the same neoplastic cells. This also appears to be the first reported case of adenocarcinoid associated with lymphoma and demonstration of histochemical/immunohistochemical and ultrastructural evidence of cellular components with dual mucinous adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine features, and the second reported case to have prostatic metastases.
...
PMID:Adenocarcinoid of ileum and appendix, incidentally discovered during exploratory laparotomy for gastric MALT lymphoma, with subsequent diffuse prostatic metastases: report of a case with light, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic studies. 995 28
Baroliths are rare complications of barium contrast roentgenography that occur almost exclusively in the colon. Baroliths are often asymptomatic, but may be associated with abdominal pain, appendicitis,
bowel obstruction
, or perforation. We present an unusual case of a barolith which developed within the lumen of the small bowel, and resulted in the detection of an otherwise occult
carcinoid
tumor of the ileum.
...
PMID:Small bowel carcinoid presenting as a barolith. 1033 94
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