Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0008031 (
chest pain
)
17,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 78-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with cough and left anterior
chest pain
. Chest X-ray examination on admission revealed a tumor shadow in the left upper lobe. Malignant tumor cells were observed on histopathological examination of a specimen obtained by bronchoscopic biopsy. Radiotherapy was performed but was not effective, and the patient died of respiratory failure 4 months after admission. Autopsy revealed a 15 cm diameter tumor with marked local invasion tendency without distant metastasis. Microscopically, the tumor consisted partly of squamous cell carcinomas, and partly of fibrosarcomas, composed of spindle cells and osteo-chondrosarcoma. The tumor was therefore diagnosed as carcinosarcoma. Immunohistochemical examination showed positive
keratin
and EMA staining only in the squamous cell carcinoma component of the tumor.
...
PMID:[A case of carcinosarcoma of the lung]. 162 91
Thirteen cases of primary thymic carcinomas are described. The patients' ages ranged from 19 to 64 years, with a median of 40 years. Nine of them were male.
Chest pain
with or without cough was the main presenting symptom. No patient had myasthenia gravis. Five histological types were identified; two were undifferentiated (lymphoepithelioma-like) carcinoma, one was a clear-cell carcinoma, two were mixed squamous and small-cell carcinoma, and six were squamous cell carcinoma. All the tumors were variably positive for anti-
keratin
antibody AE1 and AE3, but negative for AE2. Anti-neuron specific enolase antibody was useful in identifying and confirming the small-cell carcinoma component of the mixed carcinomas. Anti-epithelial membrane antigen antibody aided in revealing the glandular structures in mixed adenosquamous and small-cell carcinomas. Thymic carcinomas were histopathologically differentiated from thymomas by their malignant cytological appearance, increased mitotic activity, and central tumor necrosis. All six patients with pure squamous-cell carcinoma were still alive, with a median survival time of 27 months. All but one of the other patients of different histological types died, the exception being a recent case of mixed adenosquamous and small-cell carcinoma; their median survival was 19.5 months, or 18 months when the latter surviving case is included. The prognosis of patients with pure squamous-cell carcinoma was better.
...
PMID:Thymic carcinomas: histopathological varieties and immunohistochemical study. 229 78
Fourteen cases of a mediastinal neoplasm identical to solitary fibrous tumor (so-called fibrous mesothelioma) of the pleura were observed. The lesions presented with cough,
chest pain
, dyspnea, or as asymptomatic masses detected radiographically. Two patients had associated hypoglycemia. Eleven of the tumors were in the antero-superior mediastinum. One arose on a pedicle from the thymus, and another had entrapped thymic elements. Tumor cells were variably immunoreactive for vimentin and actin, but not for
keratin
, and lacked ultrastructural evidence of mesothelial or epithelial differentiation. Eight cases had highly cellular mitotically active regions of which six of seven with follow-up behaved aggressively; the exception was the pedunculated tumor. A 13-cm, histologically bland tumor has recurred twice. Aggressive behavior was more common than reported for solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura, but the same criteria (size, cellularity, mitotic activity, presence of pedicle) were of prognostic significance. The occurrence of solitary fibrous tumor in the mediastinum with the suggestion of thymic origin for some cases, combined with the immunohistochemical and ultrastructural findings, support a mesenchymal origin for this tumor. The differential diagnosis includes spindle cell thymoma, hemangiopericytoma, and peripheral nerve tumors.
...
PMID:Solitary fibrous tumor of the mediastinum. A report of 14 cases. 273 90
This report describes ten examples of diffuse pleural tumors felt to represent malignant mesotheliomas with osseous and cartilaginous differentiation. Typically, the patients involved were elderly whites who presented with
chest pain
, bloody pleural effusions, and diffuse and nodular pleural disease on chest roentgenograms. An asbestos-exposure history was indicated in six of the ten patients. Seven cases were malignant fibrous mesotheliomas, and three were biphasic mesotheliomas. Results of immunoperoxidase studies for cytoplasmic
keratin
were positive in three of six cases of malignant fibrous mesothelioma.
...
PMID:Malignant mesotheliomas with osseous and cartilaginous differentiation. 309 26
Due to the known association with asbestos exposure, malignant mesothelioma has assumed an importance out of proportion to its incidence in the American population (2.2 per million). Patients present with
chest pain
, shortness of breath, or both. The initial chest X-ray generally reveals a large unilateral pleural effusion. A large piece of tissue obtained via open biopsy is usually required for histologic diagnosis. Investigational approaches include multiple needle biopsies obtained for electron microscopy, as well as for immunoperoxidase staining for
keratin
and CEA. The tumor characteristically remains localized until late in its course. The treatment of mesothelioma remains unsatisfactory. However, anecdotes report long-term disease-free survival after intensive treatment. Palliation with a response rate of up to 30% to various chemotherapeutic regimens has been reported by a number of investigators.
...
PMID:Asbestos-related malignancy. 354 55
Malignant mesotheliomas have assumed an importance in the medical and lay literature out of proportion to their incidence in the American population, chiefly due to the known association of pleural mesothelioma with asbestos exposure. Data from the Connecticut tumor registry suggest that this tumor is increasing in incidence. Based on exposures between 1940 and approximately 1970, when industrial precautions were first instituted, epidemiologists estimate that the number of new cases of mesothelioma will peak sometime in the 1990s and that mesothelioma will thereafter become less common. These models generally assume that asbestos exposures after 1970 will be insignificant. While industrial levels that are legal today will almost certainly prevent the development of severe asbestosis in most workers, unfortunately a threshold of exposure below which there is no risk of mesothelioma has not been documented. Asbestos continues to be used in floor and ceiling tiles, in automobile brake linings, and in a variety of other products. At the present time, construction workers who maintain or remove asbestos constitute one of a number of groups with continued exposure. The diagnosis of a malignant pleural mesothelioma is not difficult provided that the physicians caring for such a patient consider mesothelioma in the differential diagnosis. Patients present with
chest pain
or shortness of breath, or both, and the initial chest x-ray film most often reveals a large unilateral pleural effusion. The tumor characteristically remains localized until late in its course, and thus extensive workup at the time of diagnosis is seldom required. Generally, a large piece of tissue obtained via an open biopsy is required for adequate histologic diagnosis. Investigational approaches include taking numerous needle biopsies with samples sent for electron microscopy as well as for immunoperoxidase staining for
keratin
and CEA. The treatment of this disease remains unsatisfactory. Occasional patients have remained disease-free for periods in excess of 5 years after intensive treatment, however. The conclusion that mesothelioma is untreatable is clearly untenable since palliation and a response rate of 30 per cent to various chemotherapeutic regimens have been reported by a number of investigators. While many authors have advocated supportive care alone because "current treatments have not demonstrated increased survival," we believe patients with mesothelioma should be offered investigational therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Benign and malignant pleural mesothelioma. 389 Dec 7
Although the capacity for some pulmonary carcinomas to mimic sarcomas is well recognized, their potential resemblance to selected benign lesions of the lung is currently underappreciated. The authors herein report three examples of sarcomatoid bronchogenic carcinoma with a deceptively bland appearance and an investment of reactive inflammation, such that they resembled pseudotumors histologically. These lesions occurred in two men and one woman who were 44, 61, and 63 years old, respectively, at diagnosis. All patients presented with a productive cough, hemoptysis, or
chest pain
. Their pulmonary masses were irregularly marginated radiographically, and ranged in size from 2.5 to 5.5 cm. Two were treated with lobectomy, and one underwent a wedge excision, followed by radiotherapy to the thorax. Despite these measures, each patient with inflammatory sarcomatoid carcinoma (ISC) died of disease or is likely to do so. Microscopically, ISCs were composed of uniform spindle cell proliferations with only modest nuclear pleomorphism, limited mitotic activity, and an arrangement in fascicles, storiform configurations, or haphazard arrays. Lymphocytes and plasma cells were interspersed throughout each of them, and keloidal stromal collagen was apparent internally in two examples. Two of the neoplasms also invaded pulmonary blood vessels or bronchi. A comparison group of 10 adults with pulmonary inflammatory pseudotumors (IPs) of the fibrous histiocytoma type shared several clinical attributes with ISC and showed closely similar histological features, except that the IPs lacked mitoses and invasiveness, and contained xanthoma cells or multinucleated elements in some cases in this series. Immunohistochemical analyses showed consistent dissimilarities between ISC and IP;
keratin
and epithelial membrane antigen were present in ISC but not IP, whereas actin was observed only in the proliferating spindle cells of IP. In summary, the potential clinicopathologic overlap between ISC and IP suggests that caution should be exercised in the separation of these two lesions. In particular, it is unwise to attempt to make this distinction in an intraoperative frozen section setting.
...
PMID:Inflammatory sarcomatoid carcinoma of the lung: report of three cases and clinicopathologic comparison with inflammatory pseudotumors in adult patients. 767 83
We present 25 cases of a primary pulmonary sarcoma bearing histological, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features indistinguishable from those of monophasic synovial sarcoma of soft tissue. The patients were 11 men and 14 women between the ages of 16 and 77 years. Clinically, the most common symptoms were
chest pain
, cough, shortness of breath, and hemoptysis. The lesions involved all lung segments. Grossly, they varied in size from 0.6 to 20 cm and were described as soft to rubbery tumors with areas of necrosis and hemorrhage, some with cystic changes. Two lesions involved the bronchial wall and in one case the tumor was described as encircling the bronchial tree. Histologically, all of the lesions were characterized by an atypical spindle cell proliferation with a solid growth pattern. Areas of myxoid, neural, hemangiopericytic, and epithelial-like growth pattern were observed. Mitoses, necrosis, and hemorrhage were seen in all lesions in varying proportions. Immunohistochemical studies for epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) and
keratin
showed strong focal positivity in 25 of 25 and 23 of 25 lesions, respectively. Immunohistochemical study for vimentin showed diffuse strong positivity in all lesions. Other immunostains, including desmin, smooth muscle actin, and S-100 protein, were negative. Electron microscopy in three cases showed spindle cells with elongated nuclei containing abundant cytoplasmic rough endoplasmic reticulum and well developed desmosome type intercellular junctions. Follow-up information ranging from 2 to 20 years was obtained in 18 patients. Six patients died of their tumors, whereas four patients died of unrelated causes without evidence of recurrence or metastases. Eight patients were alive with disease (recurrence and/or metastases) from 1 to 7 years after diagnosis. Four patients were alive and well without evidence of recurrence or metastases from 2 to 20 years (mean follow-up, 12.5 years). The present group of lesions appears to constitute a distinctive and as yet previously undescribed primary sarcoma of the lung, which probably represents the visceral counterpart of monophasic synovial sarcoma of soft tissue in a pulmonary location. Because of their distinctive biology these lesions should be distinguished from a variety of primary and metastatic malignancies of the lung.
...
PMID:Primary pulmonary sarcomas with features of monophasic synovial sarcoma: a clinicopathological, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural study of 25 cases. 775 Sep 31
Four cases are presented of primary anterior mediastinal tumors in young adults that were characterized by solid, infiltrative lesions showing histologic and immunohistochemical features of rhabdomyoblastic differentiation. The patients were three men and one woman between 19 and 27 years of age (mean age, 23 years). All patients presented with symptoms referable to their tumors, including cough,
chest pain
, dyspnea, and left-sided pleural effusion. Grossly and radiographically, the lesions were characterized by their solid, infiltrative appearance. Histologically, two cases corresponded to the solid variant of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, one case was an embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma with a predominant spindle cell component, and the remaining case showed the features of a pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcoma. No glandular, epithelial, or other component could be identified in any of the tumors on extensive sampling. Immunohistochemical studies showed positive staining of the tumor cells with actin, desmin, and vimentin antibodies, with focal positivity for myoglobin in three cases and focal positive staining with S-100 protein in one case. Stains for low and high molecular weight
keratin
, carcinoembryonic antigen, alpha-fetoprotein, human chorionic gonadotropin, placental alkaline phosphatase, leukocyte-common antigen, and neuron-specific enolase were negative. All patients experienced rapid recurrence and metastases within the first 6 months after diagnosis. Three patients died within this period due to their tumors; the fourth patient has been lost to follow-up. Pure primary rhabdomyosarcomas of the anterior mediastinum are highly aggressive neoplasms that should be distinguished from germ cell, teratomatous, or carcinosarcomatous tumors with a focal rhabdomyoblastic component.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcomas of the anterior mediastinum: report of four cases unassociated with germ cell, teratomatous, or thymic carcinomatous components. 816 67
Five smooth muscle tumours presenting as pleural neoplasma are presented. The patients were three women and two men aged between 21 and 69 years (mean = 45 years). Clinically, one patient presented with
chest pain
, one with empyema and the other three were asymptomatic. Two of the tumours were located in the left side of the chest cavity and three in the right side. In four cases, the lesions presented as solitary pleural-based masses that varied in size from 10-18 cm in greatest dimension: in two of these cases, involvement of the diaphragm was present in addition to the pleural involvement. In one case, the tumour was seen to totally encase the right lung simulating the growth pattern of malignant mesothelioma. Histologically, three cases displayed an atypical spindle cell proliferation with marked cellular pleomorphism, mitoses and areas of hemorrhage and necrosis. The other two cases were characterized by a bland-appearing smooth muscle proliferation of uncertain malignant potential composed of elongated cells with a moderate amount of eosinophilic cytoplasm and cigar-shaped nuclei, lacking significant nuclear pleomorphism or mitotic activity. Immunohistochemical studies showed strong positivity for alpha-smooth muscle actin in all cases, and for desmin in four of five cases, and a focal positive reaction for
keratin
in one case. Ultrastructural examination in one of the high-grade tumours showed features of smooth muscle differentiation. Three of the patients were treated by complete surgical excision while, in the other two patients, the lesions were incompletely resected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Smooth muscle tumours presenting as pleural neoplasms. 852 86
1
2
3
Next >>