Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Contact ulcer granuloma has a multifactorial etiology but vocal abuse is considered the most important etiological factor. Some other possible factors are well-known: tuberculosis, allergies, hormonal or autonomic imbalance, psychosomatic influences, reflux-esophagitis, pathological conditions of the nose, nasal accessory sinus, tonsils. Constitutional factors play also an important role. The symptoms range from mild huskiness to severe hoarseness with pain extending to the ear, dysphagia, sometimes hemoptysis and chronic cough. Failure to recognize the pathological features of this frequently overlooked lesion leads to diagnosis of larynx cancer, angiosarcoma or hemangioma. Indication for microsurgical removal is only severe dyspnea by size of mass or if the dignity is not clear, because any surgical procedure has only temporary value and does not eliminate the etiological factors. The dignity can normally be proved by stroboscope. Vocal rehabilitation and re-education are an essential appropriate means of treatment for this disease if other causative factors are excluded.
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PMID:[Contact granuloma: symptoms, etiology, diagnosis, therapy]. 157 50

Airway obstruction, dysphagia and mediastinal masses are the most common causes for surgery of the mediastinum in the pediatric age group. From 1976-1990, 82 children underwent such surgery: 7 tracheoplasties, 4 endotracheal resection of a membrane, 6 stenoses due to haemangioma or lymphangioma, 2 papillomatosis of the trachea, 8 pexes of the aorta or the innominate artery due to tracheomalacia, 7 vascular rings (4 right descendent aorta, 3 double aortic arch), 4 congenital esophageal stenoses, 44 mediastinal tumors (20 malignant, 24 benign lesions).
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PMID:[Pediatric surgery emphasis in diseases of the mediastinum]. 198 70

Phillips and Ruh (1912) were the first to describe a congenital hemangioma of the larynx. Sweetser subsequently classified laryngeal hemangiomata into infantile and adult types and noted differences in incidence, location, and symptoms. According to Sweetser, the infantile form is less common, is almost always subglottic, and presents with stridor which may be intermittent. The adult form is somewhat more common, is generally supraglottic, and often presents with hoarseness or dysphagia. We present what we believe is the first reported case of a postcricoid hemangioma in an infant. A review of hemangiomata of the aerodigestive tract is presented and treatment is discussed.
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PMID:Presentation and management of postcricoid hemangiomata in infancy. 360 Jan 38

A 16-year old thoroughbred mare was presented with dysphagia and food being ejected from the mouth and nostrils. Clinical signs were exhibited for three weeks before it was euthanased on humanitarian grounds. Post mortem examination revealed a soft haemangioma measuring 7 cm X 5 cm suspended from the roof of the medial compartment of the left guttural pouch.
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PMID:Haemangioma of the guttural pouch of a 16-year-old thoroughbred mare: clinical and pathological findings. 371 5

Esophageal hemangioma is a benign tumor that may cause dysphagia and upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Invasive measures such as endoscopic biopsy and surgical excision have been required for diagnosis in most reported cases. We have reported a case focusing on the use of two noninvasive techniques, contrast CT and radionuclide angiography, in the diagnosis of esophageal hemangioma.
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PMID:Esophageal hemangioma: diagnosis with computed tomography and radionuclide angiography. 664 24

Hemangiomas of the upper aerodigestive tract may present a therapeutic challenge depending on their size, location and symptoms. We present a rare case of cavernous hemangioma of the aryepiglottic fold applaning in an adult. First symptoms were dysphagia and hoarseness. Surgical removal was performed with a CO2/Nd: YAG combination laser under microscopic control. After a regular postoperative course the patient has remained disease-free after a 2 year follow up period. We suggest the use of the CO2/Nd: YAG combination laser as preferred treatment in cases of exophytic hemangiomas, because of the favorable combination of excision with photocoagulation effects.
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PMID:[Laser surgical excision of a hypopharyngeal hemangioma using the CO2/Nd: YAG combination laser]. 764 1

A 14-year-old boy was admitted to our Department due to peripheral palsy of right VII and bilateral of the VI cranial nerves, spasticity, cerebellar symptoms as well as to dysphagia and dysarthria. In general, he was hospitalized 13 times because of the disease of a relapsing-remitting and next progressive course. He died 31 years after onset of the disease. Multiple sclerosis was diagnosed. Brain autopsy revealed tumor involving almost all brain stem structures and a part of right cerebellar hemisphere. Histologically, cavernous angioma was diagnosed.
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PMID:Cavernous angioma of brain stem mimicking multiple sclerosis. 867 35

We report a case of esophageal hemangioma presenting with dysphagia and odynophagia. To our knowledge, very few cases have been reported in the radiological literature.
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PMID:Esophageal hemangioma. 926 75

A 40-year-old female was referred to our hospital for dysphagia. A hemangioma measuring 5 x 2.5 x 2.5 cm was revealed as a round defect by esophagography and was partially cystic on CT and MRI. Through a neck incision, the esophageal wall on the tumor side was initially opened. The tumor partially adhered to the esophageal wall, but was dissected from the esophageal wall and then resected easily. Microscopic examination of tumor revealed cavernous hemagioma. Thirty days after the initial surgery, the recurrent tumor was detected in the pharynx and increased rapidly. Then a second operation was performed. The tumor was completely resected by mucosectomy including normal esophageal mucosa. Recurrence was caused by residual cystic wall of the hemangioma adhering to the esophageal mucosa after the first procedure.
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PMID:[A case of recurrent esophageal cavernous hemangioma increasing rapidly after surgery]. 988 79

A clinical case of epithelioid hemangioma of the scalene muscle that occupied the parapharyngeal space is reported. The patient was a 34 year old man with a 2-month history of sensation of pharyngeal foreign body and mild dysphagia. The exploration revealed a tumor of the posterior and lateral wall of the oropharynx that extended from the rhinopharynx to the hypopharynx. The diagnostic sequence included CT, MRI, Doppler echography, and arteriography, which identified a right post-styloid tumor located behind and medial to the jugular vein, internal carotid artery, and vagal nerve, but did not affect arterial blood flow. The patient underwent surgical treatment consisting of lateral cervicotomy, tumor excision, and histological study.
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PMID:[Intramuscular epithelioid hemangioma of the parapharyngeal space]. 1021 94


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