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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 62-year-old male was admitted with lumbago and gait disturbance for 3 months. He had complained of a
cough
for 3 years. His admission chest radiography revealed tumor shadow in right lower lung field. The patient was diagnosed as adenocarcinoma of the lung by transbronchial biopsy. Bone scintigraphy revealed multiple
bone metastases
with rib, lumbar and pelvic bone. Clinical staging was IV and performance status was 3. The patient was treated by combined chemotherapy with epirubicin 20 mg/m2, mitomycin C 8 mg/m2 and carboplatin 350 mg/m2. After 2 cycles he was able to walk by himself and the lung tumor regressed in 40% of pretreated size. This combined chemotherapy could be performed for outpatients because of the mild gastrointestinal side effects and little hydration.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of adenocarcinoma of the lung with bone metastases by combined chemotherapy with epirubicin, mitomycin C and carboplatin]. 141 18
An autopsy case of an 18-year-old boy with adenocarcinoma of the lung is reported. He experienced dyspnea and hemosputum in July 1988. Chest radiographs showed a diffuse bilateral streaky shadow, bilateral pleural effusion and cardiac enlargement. The diagnosis of adenocarcinoma was made by transbronchial biopsy at another hospital. He visited the National Cancer Center Hospital on October 7, 1988. The diagnosis of lung cancer was strongly suggested by positive immunohistochemical staining for pulmonary surfactant apoprotein in biopsy specimens from supraclavicular lymph nodes. Intensive systemic survey demonstrated no other primary site than the lung. The patient was treated with cisplatin, adriamycin and etoposide and his subjective symptoms such as
cough
and dyspnea significantly improved over the next three months. Tumor shadows in the lung increased steadily, however after February, 1989. A significant lymphangitic spread of the carcinoma and marked obsteoblastic
bone metastases
were revealed at autopsy.
...
PMID:Primary lung cancer in an 18-year-old boy: case report. 219 88
A patient with immunoblastic lymphadenopaty which evolved into immunoblastic sarcoma is reported. A 48-year-old female was admitted to our department because of
cough
and fever. A diagnosis of immunoblastic lymphadenopathy had been made two years before the present admission. Physical examination revealed generalized lymphadenopathy. Chest radiograms showed a left hilar mass. The pulmonary tumor and enlarged lymphnodes were treated by irradiation. Although there was marked improvement at first, she experienced several relapses. One year after the admission, chest radiograms showed multiple pulmonary lesions. She developed pancytopenia and
bone metastases
. At autopsy, the lymphnodes showed histological evidence of immunoblastic sarcoma; a pulmonary lesion showed immunoblastic lymphadenopathy.
...
PMID:[Case of immunoblastic sarcoma (IBS)]. 664 66
Approximately one half of prescribed radiotherapy is given for palliation of symptoms due to incurable cancer. Distressing symptoms including pain, bleeding, and obstruction can often be relieved with minimal toxic effects. Painful osseous metastasis is common in oncologic practice. Ninety percent of patients with symptomatic
bone metastases
obtain some pain relief with a lowdose, brief course of palliative radiotherapy. One half of the responding patients may experience complete pain relief. A single dose of 800 cGy in the setting of painful bone metastasis may provide pain control comparable to more protracted treatment at a higher dose of radiation. Patients with lytic disease in weight-bearing bones, particularly in the presence of cortical destruction, should be considered for prophylactic surgical stabilization of their condition. Routinely a brief, fractionated course of radiotherapy is given postoperatively. Pain due to multiple
bone metastases
uncontrolled by analgesics can be managed with single doses of halfbody irradiation. Doses of 600 cGy delivered to the upper half-body (above the umbilicus) and 800 cGy to the lower half-body (from the umbilicus to the middle of the femur) will provide some pain relief in 73% of patients. Half-body techniques have been investigated as prophylactic treatment, as a complement to local-field irradiation, and as fractionated rather than singledose therapy. Although intravenous administration of strontium 89 has been associated with myelosuppression, this treatment has been shown (a) to relieve pain due to bone metastasis and (b) to delay development of new painful sites. Recent data from phase III trials demonstrated that bisphosphonates have a role in reducing skeletal morbidity due to bone metastasis. Bone pain was reduced, and the incidence of pathologic fracture and the need for future radiotherapy was decreased. Radiotherapy relieves clinical symptoms in 70% to 90% of patients with brain metastases. Brief treatment schedules (e.g., 2000 cGy in five fractions over 1 week) are as effective as more prolonged therapy. Patients with solitary brain metastasis and no extracranial disease or controlled extracranial disease should be considered for surgical resection, because phase III data indicate enhanced survival with such an approach. Whole-brain radiotherapy is routinely administered postoperatively. A phase III study is examining the impact of accelerated fractionated doses of radiotherapy (two treatments per day) on survival of patients with brain metastases. Stereotaxic radiosurgical treatment is becoming increasingly available and permits delivery of radiation to metastatic intracranial tumor with minimal exposure of normal surrounding brain This treatment is most commonly used at the time of a solitary recurrence of disease in patients who previously received whole-brain radiotherapy. A role for this modality in newly diagnosed brain metastases remains to be defined. Chest symptoms are common in patients with locally advanced lung cancer and are effectively palliated with one 1000 cGy or two 850 cGy one fraction doses of radiation to the thoracic inlet and mediastinum. Chest pain and hemoptysis are more effectively palliated than
cough
and dyspnea. In patients with stage III cancer there is no compelling evidence that radiotherapy confers a survival advantage, and it may be reasonable to administer thoracic radiotherapy only when the patient has significant symptoms and the goal is to achieve control of these symptoms. Approximately 75% of the cases of superior vena cava syndrome are due to lung cancer, and small-cell lung cancer is the most common histologic type. A histologic diagnosis should be obtained before treatment is started, because detection of lymphoma or small-cell carcinoma would necessitate systemic therapy. Eighty percent of the patients with vena cava syndrome due to malignant disease achieve symptom relief with a brief, fractionated, palliative course of rad
...
PMID:Radiotherapy for palliation of symptoms in incurable cancer. 920 88
The authors report the case of a 28-year-old woman referred to their department by a respiratory medicine department with an inferior mediastinal tumour arising from the right atrium, presenting in the form of dysponea, dry
cough
and chest pain associated with a general syndrome composed of fever, weight loss and physical asthenia. Physical examination revealed a superior vena cava syndrome, the electrocardiogram showed diffuse repolarization disorders and the chest x-ray showed an opacity of the anterior and inferior mediastinum. The diagnosis of tumour of the right atrium was based on echocardiography and thoracic CT scan. Subtotal surgical resection under cardiopulmonary bypass allowed examination of the histological type of the tumour. After routine chemotherapy, despite negative secondary staging and a favourable immediate course, the patient died 11 months after the operation in a context of local recurrence and hepatic and
bone metastases
.
...
PMID:[Angiosarcoma of the right atrium. Presentation of a surgically treated case and comparison with data of the literature]. 958 34
Lung cancer during pregnancy is rare, although the number of case reports has been increasing in recent years. Herein, we describe two cases of lung carcinoma complicating pregnancy with different presentations and outcomes, and review the relevant literature. The first case involved a 31-year-old patient with squamous cell carcinoma with multiple
bone metastases
. The initial symptoms were productive cough and dyspnea on exertion during the second trimester of pregnancy, to which the patient paid little attention. Chemoradiation was started 1 month postpartum, soon after the diagnosis was made, but with little response. She died at home several days after palliative radiotherapy. The second case involved a 34-year-old patient with poorly differentiated lung carcinoma with brain metastasis. Left hemiparesis had developed initially during the third trimester. She underwent excision of the metastatic brain tumor and received radiotherapy to the left lung tumor and brain. The patient is still alive after a follow-up period of more than 1 year. Delayed diagnosis may be the main problem in the management of lung cancer during pregnancy, because of misinterpretation of common respiratory symptoms and physicians' reluctance to use radiologic imaging studies owing to concerns over the safety of the fetus. Thus, we suggest chest radiographs with abdominal lead shielding for pregnant patients with protracted
cough
and hemoptysis. Treatment of unresectable lung cancer during pregnancy generally consisted of radiation therapy with or without chemotherapy in previous reports, but the optimal therapy is still unknown, owing to inadequate case numbers and insufficient follow-up data.
...
PMID:Lung cancer in pregnancy: report of two cases. 974 70
The patient was a 74-year-old man, a physician, whose chief complaint was an unproductive
cough
. The shadow of a mass was seen at the hilum of the left lung, and the mediastinal lymph nodes on both sides were swollen. No histological diagnosis was obtained even after bronchoscopy, including transbronchial needle aspiration biopsy, but large-cell carcinoma of the lung was diagnosed on the basis of ultrasound-guided biopsy of a shadow in the liver suspected of being a metastatic tumor (T2N3M1, Stage IV). Two courses of chemotherapy (CBCDA + VDS) failed to gain any improvement, and the pain resulting from recurrent
bone metastases
was managed mainly by the administration of the best supportive care. The patient was readmitted to the hospital after development of numbness in the right upper extremity followed by complication of pneumonia and heart failure, and he passed away. Autopsy revealed a primary hilar lung tumor with a histological diagnosis of poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma.
...
PMID:A case of poorly differentiated hilar lung adenocarcinoma of an unidentified histological type. 1119 85
Desmoplastic mesothelioma is a rare subtype of diffuse malignant mesothelioma, and is often difficult to distinguish from reactive pleural fibrosis because of associated extensive collagen fibrosis. An 82-year-old woman with a severe
cough
was revealed to have pleural effusion and diffuse pleural thickening on the right side. Antibiotics were ineffective, and a compression fracture of the ninth and tenth thoracic vertebral bodies was recognized on X-ray. Autopsy revealed a diffuse pleural thickening with hyalinized collagen tissue in the central part of the pleura. However, the peripheral part of the fibrous tissue was composed of spindle and polygonal cell proliferation that were immunohistochemically positive for antibodies against cytokeratin and vimentin. In addition, the ninth and tenth thoracic spines were infiltrated by similar cells. The condition was diagnosed as desmoplastic mesothelioma with
bone metastases
. Asbestos bodies were detected in the thickened pleura and fibrosed alveolar septa, and it was suggested retrospectively that the patient had been exposed to asbestos. Thus, autopsy analyses of fibrous pleurisy are necessary to detect a desmoplastic variant of mesothelioma of the pleura and its association with asbestos exposure.
...
PMID:Desmoplastic malignant mesothelioma of the pleura: autopsy reveals asbestos exposure. 1278 16
CASE 1: A 64-year-old, otherwise healthy woman was referred to the surgery clinic for a presumed umbilical hernia. On physical examination, a cutaneous nodule was noted on the umbilical region and the patient was referred to the dermatology clinic. The patient was reexamined and an erythematous nodule was observed in the umbilicus measuring 2.5 cm in diameter. The patient denied pain, change in bowel habits, or weight loss. There were no other abdominal masses, no sign of ascites, and no regional lymphadenopathy. A skin biopsy from the nodule showed mucinous adenocarcinoma. Immunohistochemical staining was positive for carcinoembryonic antigen, and negative for cytokeratin (CK)7 and CK20. These results were consistent with a Sister Mary Joseph's nodule and led to the diagnosis of an occult colon carcinoma. The patient had no risk factors for colorectal carcinoma. The patient underwent surgery in another hospital, and died 3 months after the initial diagnosis of Sister Mary Joseph's nodule. CASE 2: A 73-year-old woman was referred to the dermatology clinic for evaluation of a painful, ulcerated, 3-cm lesion in the umbilicus (Figure 1). She was otherwise asymptomatic. A skin biopsy showed neoplastic glandular cells infiltrating among collagen bundles (Figure 2). Stainings for mucin and for CK7 were positive, while staining for CK20 was negative. An abdominopelvic CT scan demonstrated a 3.5-cm space-occupying lesion in the liver. Results of gastroscopy, colonoscopy, chest computed tomographic (CT) scan, and mammography were normal. Serum levels of the tumor-associated protein CA125 were elevated to 164 units, while those of CA 19-9 and carcinoembryonic antigen were within normal range. A gynecologic examination and a transvaginal ultrasound were normal. The patient had no personal or family history of any malignancy or any risk factors for developing a carcinoma. The patient was scheduled for a palliative resection of the umbilical nodule, combined with a laparoscopic inspection in search of the undetected primary tumor. She refused surgery and was lost to follow-up. She died 4 months after the initial diagnosis of umbilical metastasis. CASE 3: A 51-year-old man was aware of a silent mass in his umbilicus for 2 years without seeking medical advice. Following 2 weeks of increasing pain in this area, he was referred to the emergency room for a suspected incarcerated umbilical hernia. Surgery revealed a mass attached to the fascia and peritoneal fat. The mass was removed and diagnosed as a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, staining positively for carcinoembryonic antigen, and negatively for CK20, CK7, prostate-specific antigen, and prostatic acid phosphatase. Both gastroscopy and colonoscopy failed to detect the primary tumor. An abdominopelvic CT scan was normal, but a CT scan of the chest disclosed a nodule measuring 2.5 x 1.5 cm in the lower lobe of the right lung. On bronchoscopy, it was found to be an invasive adenocarcinoma, consistent with a primary tumor of the lung. The patient was a heavy smoker (45 pack-years). The patient received 4 cycles of combined chemotherapy with carboplatine and gemcitabine, with no improvement. A month later, the patient complained of abdominal pain. Following demonstration of intra-abdominal spread of disease by CT scan, a second line chemotherapy was instituted with paclitaxel. A month later the patient's condition deteriorated and he complained of
cough
, sweating, and pain along the right leg. A bone scan revealed
bone metastases
in the right femur and left tibia. Two weeks later he was admitted to the hospital with intestinal obstruction and underwent laparotomy. He had massive intra-abdominal spread of cancer and ascites. Only a palliative colostomy was performed. The patient died 3 weeks later, 9 months after the diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the lung. The clinical data on the three patients are summarized in Table I.
...
PMID:Sister Mary Joseph's nodule as a presenting sign of internal malignancy. 1695 43
A 70-year-old woman with
cough
was diagnosed with pulmonary adenocarcinoma by bronchoscopic transbronchial biopsy. She was diagnosed cT2N0M0, stage IB clinically, and the tumor was surgically resected. Postoperative pathology was confirmed to be pleomorphic carcinoma of pT2N2M0, stage III A. She received 6 courses of adjuvant chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin and docetaxel. Five months later, new pulmonary and
bone metastases
were detected. Gefitinib was started, and she has shown stable disease for 7 months. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation was observed in her tumor specimens.
...
PMID:[A case of pulmonary pleomorphic carcinoma with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation]. 1879 19
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