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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 77-year-old man with stage IIB squamous cell carcinoma of the lung underwent right upper lobectomy. One month later he was examined for right chest pain, dyspnea,
cough
, and weakness. A roentgenogram showed nondiagnostic diffuse opacification of his right lung cavity. An F-18
FDG
positron emission tomographic (PET) study revealed extensive uptake in the right pleural area, left adrenal gland, right axilla, and soft tissues consistent with extensive local recurrence and metastatic disease. Biopsy of a right chest soft tissue lesion showed spindle cell carcinoma, a rare variant of squamous cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Extensive F-18 FDG uptake in metastatic spindle cell carcinoma of the lung. 1113 69
In pursuing a tissue diagnosis of a suspected lung cancer, there is a range of procedures to choose from. The principal goals are ideally to diagnose and pathologically stage the patient's lung cancer at the same time, preferably by using the safest, least invasive, and least costly tests. If there is clinical or radiographic evidence of extrapulmonary spread of disease, including supraclavicular N3 nodal involvement or a malignant pleural effusion, then radiology-guided or open biopsy will confirm tumor cell type and stage the patient as unresectable. For patients with symptoms, such as increasing
cough
or hemoptysis, that are suggestive of airways involvement. with or without radiographic finding of central lesions, sputum cytology is the least invasive study with a high specificity. A positive finding of cancer is especially helpful if the patient is not a surgical candidate because of anatomic location of the lesion or severe physiologic limitations. The limited sensitivity of sputum cytology and poor NPV may improve with improved sputum induction and collection and processing techniques. Bronchoscopy with direct examination of the visible airways is most often the preferred invasive diagnostic procedure. Although the procedure should be geared toward sampling the highest staged lesion to provide an accurate tissue staging at the time of diagnosis, additional procedures can be performed in sequence to sample different nodal stations, is well as the primary lung mass. The incidental finding of an unexpected central airways lesions or a synchronous second endobronchial lung primary will also affect plans for treatment. Autofluorescence bronchoscopy can improve the sensitivity for detecting early intraepithelial neoplasia. Bronchoscopy for central and peripheral lung masses that are suspected to be lung cancer should be performed with ROSE whenever available. For visible endobronchial lesions, given the similar yield of EBBX and EBNA, EBNA may provide an immediate diagnosis, thus obviating additional, possibly morbid, procedures such as BB or EBBX. For submucosal lesions, EBNA is superior. For central cancers that are peribronchial, TBNA performed as for regional nodal sampling should have a yield that is comparable to TBNA for staging. TBBX and TBNA of peripheral nodules that are smaller than 3 cm have a lower diagnostic yield. Coming generations of thin bronchoscopes and improved radiographic guidance systems may improve our ability to biopsy these lesions with greater accuracy and safety. Under all circumstances, immediate cytology feedback with ROSE will confirm the adequacy of the retrieved specimen for a definitive tissue diagnosis, thus avoiding the need for extra biopsies, or worse yet, the need for a second invasive procedure because of insufficient diagnostic material. ROSE is educational to the clinician and fellow-in-training in getting immediate feedback on the procedural techniques and in learning pulmonary pathology, as well. The diagnostic sensitivity of TTNA is high, especially for the larger peripheral-based lung lesion, and TTNA is a relatively rapid procedure. TTNA's sensitivity falls for smaller or more central lesions, where the false negative rate can approach 25% to 30%; the risk of pneumothoraces and bleeding increases with central biopsies. Furthermore, TTNA usually does not provide information about nodal staging, unless the TTNA is initially directed toward central lymph nodes. The central airways are not examined in the same appointment to address issues of resection margins when there may be central spread of disease. TTNA should, therefore, be held in reserve for cases in which the sputum cytology and subsequent bronchoscopy are negative, and the patient is not a surgical candidate or refuses surgery, even if the cancer is potentially resectable. TTNA may then provide the tissue diagnosis to permit initiation of cytotoxic chemotherapy and radiotherapy. TTNA may also be helpful in cases where the likelihood of cancer is only intermediate, such that a specific benign diagnosis or an adequate sample without cancer will greatly reduce the likelihood ratio of missing a cancer, and justify to the patient and physician an approach of careful observation. To maximize the yield of these diagnostic procedures, there must be continued improvement in the hands-on teaching of clinical fellows and pulmonary practitioners in the use of the various techniques of TBNA and TBBX, as well as the applications of new endoscopic technology, such as EBUS. Definitive curative surgery remains the goal for patients with lung cancer, with accurate pathological staging performed intraoperatively. Complete lobectomy or pneumonectomy remains the standard resectional approach. Therefore, for patients with sufficient cardiopulmonary reserve who can be clinically staged as IA or IB, either by good quality CT with contrast or increasingly with 18-
FDG
PET, the initial tissue diagnosis may be at the time of surgery, when a frozen section preceding a complete lobectomy with lymph node sampling will combine diagnosis and therapy.
...
PMID:Tissue diagnosis of suspected lung cancer: selecting between bronchoscopy, transthoracic needle aspiration, and resectional biopsy. 1282 Jul 12
A 64 year old man receiving long term amiodarone treatment presented with dyspnea,
cough
, and weight loss. Radiographs and computed tomography showed a lung mass with associated multiple pulmonary nodules. Biopsies of the pulmonary mass showed foamy histiocytes without malignant cells. However, findings on
FDG
-PET scan were consistent with a malignant tumour. These findings on computed tomography and PET scan and the unusually late resolution of the pulmonary lesions after withdrawal of amiodarone treatment posed a challenging diagnostic problem.
...
PMID:Amiodarone toxicity presenting as pulmonary mass and peripheral neuropathy: the continuing diagnostic challenge. 1639 86
A 61-year-old man visited another hospital with chief complaints of dry
cough
, appetite loss and body weight loss. On chest X ray film and CT, right supraclavicular and mediastinal lymph nodes were swollen. For further examination, he was referred to our hospital and diagnosed as primary mediastinal choriocarcinoma. We conducted surgery after four cycles of chemotherapy using cisplatin, etoposide and bleomycin. After chemotherapy, residual tumors were found on chest CT. In
FDG
-PET some parts of the residual tumors seen on CT showed much less uptake and the others showed similar uptake. Histologically the areas showing similar uptake contained more viable cells, and the other areas showing less uptake almost completely consisted of necrotic tissue. We believe
FDG
-PET can be useful to evaluate the viability of tumors after chemotherapy in extra gonadal choriocarcinoma in the mediastinum.
...
PMID:[A case of primary mediastinal choriocarcinoma in which FDG-PET was performed for the evaluation of the treatment]. 1735 76
A 32-year-old man presented with asthenia, weight loss,
cough
, and dysphagia following a recent stay in Morocco. Endoscopy showed a bulky mass of the epiglottis suspected of being a malignant tumor. The patient underwent jointly an F-18
FDG
PET/CT and a biopsy of the tumor. Against all expectations, biopsy revealed granulomatous inflammation with epitheloid giant cells and caeseating necrosis. These findings associated with the presence of acid-fast bacilli in the sputum smears were highly suggestive of laryngeal tuberculosis, which was confirmed later after cultivation of mycobacteria. F-18
FDG
PET showed diffuse pharyngolaryngeal and lung uptake with bilateral cervical and abdominal nodes, but also one thoracic vertebral uptake. Lung CT could have revealed carcinomatous dissemination, but cavitary lesions in some pulmonary segments were more evocative of tuberculosis. Moreover, cerebral MRI showed brain tuberculomas not visualized on F-18
FDG
PET/CT. The patient was treated with a 5-antituberculosis drug regimen, which improved clinical symptoms with epiglottis mass regression, and lung CT image reduction, clinching the systemic tuberculosis diagnosis. A control F-18
FDG
PET/CT performed 5 months later showed disappearance of the pharyngolaryngeal and node uptake, with an improvement of lung uptake without normalization, arguing for persistent disease. Unexpected pathologic findings may be present in more than 3% of neck dissections. Although this is usually indolent, with the underlying SCC remaining the main prognostic determinate, it may significantly complicate postoperative management.
...
PMID:Systemic tuberculosis presenting as an epiglottic mass detected on F-18 FDG PET/CT. 1771 28
A 62-year-old man with recurrent episodes of
coughing
underwent a whole-body
FDG
PET/CT scan to evaluate possible lung malignancy. The PET images showed increased
FDG
uptake in the right side of the bronchus corresponding to a foreign body on the concurrent CT images. The foreign body was subsequently removed through bronchofiberscopy and was proven to be a fishbone.
...
PMID:Elevated FDG uptake in right middle segmental bronchus impacted with foreign body. 1930 58
A 48-year-old woman suffering from left-side back pain and a 3-year history of
coughing
was found to have a submucosal lesion occluding the left main bronchus by chest computed tomographic scanning and bronchoscopy. The lesion showed a high standardized uptake value of 3.9 in positron emission tomography with fluorine-18 labeled fluorodeoxyglucose scanning (
FDG
-PET). The tumor was resected with the posterior wall of the left main bronchus through a postrolateral thoracotomy, and a large defect in the membranous portion was reconstructed in the manner of wedge bronchoplasty, preserving the lung parenchyma. Pathological findings confirmed the diagnosis of schwannoma with no malignant cells. Schwannoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of endobronchial tumors with high standardized uptake values in
FDG
-PET.
...
PMID:Increased fluorodeoxyglucose-uptake in positron emission tomography with an endobronchial schwannoma occluding the left main stem bronchus. 1970 42
An 11-year-old girl presented with a 2-month history of progressively worsening
cough
, daily fevers, and weight loss. A chest radiograph revealed multiple cystic cavitary lung lesions. An extensive infectious work-up was negative. Chest CT verified multiple cavitary lung lesions bilaterally, and [F-18]2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose ((18)F-
FDG
) positron emission tomography with CT (PET/CT) showed increased uptake in the lung lesions as well as regional lymph nodes. Subsequent biopsy of an involved lymph node confirmed classical Hodgkin lymphoma, nodular sclerosis type. This case represents an unusual presentation for a child with Hodgkin lymphoma and demonstrates a role for (18)F-
FDG
PET/CT in evaluating a child with cavitary lung lesions.
...
PMID:Diffuse cavitary lung lesions. 2018 Jan 2
A 62-year-old man presented with a two-week history of dry
cough
. A chest computed tomography (CT) showed three nodular masses of soft tissue density without calcification or cavitary formation in the right lung. F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT scan revealed high
FDG
uptake in two out of three pulmonary nodules. Transbronchial lung biopsy specimens consisted of amorphous eosinophilic deposits that were demonstrated to be amyloid because they were positive for Congo Red staining. After oxidation with permanganate solution, the Congo Red staining disappeared, indicating that this amyloid was amyloid A protein-derived type. There was no evidence of any systemic diseases. We diagnosed the patient as having multiple nodular pulmonary AA amyloidosis. The patient was conservatively managed without treatment, and the pulmonary nodules disappeared spontaneously three months later.
...
PMID:Spontaneous resolution of multiple nodular pulmonary AA amyloidosis. 2104 64
Pulmonary paragonimiasis is a relatively rare cause of lung disease revealing a wide variety of radiologic findings, such as air-space consolidation, nodules, and cysts. We describe here a case of pulmonary paragonimiasis in a 27-year-old woman who presented with a 2-month history of
cough
and sputum. Based on chest computed tomography (CT) scans and fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) findings, the patient was suspected to have a metastatic lung tumor. However, she was diagnosed as having Paragonimus westermani infection by an immunoserological examination using ELISA. Follow-up chest X-ray and CT scans after chemotherapy with praziquantel showed an obvious improvement. There have been several reported cases of pulmonary paragonimiasis mimicking lung tumors on
FDG
-PET. However, all of them were suspected as primary lung tumors. To our knowledge, this patient represents the first case of paragonimiasis mimicking metastatic lung disease on
FDG
-PET CT imaging.
...
PMID:A pulmonary paragonimiasis case mimicking metastatic pulmonary tumor. 2146 Dec 72
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