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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although intramural spreading from gastric carcinoma to the esophageal wall is occasionally reported, longitudinal intramural lesion of the esophagus is very rare. We herein report the case of a patient found to have a carcinoma of the gastric cardia with intramural spreading to the esophagus approximately 7.0 cm in length. A 65-year-old man was admitted to our department suffering from a persistent midthoracic pain and mild
dysphagia
during the previous 3 months. Upper gastrointestinal studies revealed an oval submucosal tumor of the lower esophagus and a flare irregular lesion on the esophagogastric junction. An endoscopic ultrasonography showed the main tumor was in the submucosal layer and invaded beyond the muscularis propria. Histopathological examination of the resected specimen confirmed a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, 7.0 cm in length, which penetrated through the gastric wall, and invaded the submucosal layer of the esophagus. When only a few scattered carcinoma cells infiltrate only the mucosa or submucosa, it is difficult to diagnose the extent of esophageal invasion. In treating patients with
gastric cancer
with esophageal invasion, it is important to determine the safety of the proximal margin for esophageal resection. Histological examination using frozen sections obtained during surgery is essential for deciding the operative safety margin.
...
PMID:Esophageal intramural spreading from an adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction. 1536 58
Gastric cancer
is uncommon before the fifth decade of life. The appearance of adenocarcinoma in young adults has motivated molecular studies that aimed to identify inherited mutations. Moreover, carcinoma of the stomach in the young adult is sufficiently rare to generate considerable interest in each occurrence of it, especially when it occurs in the gastroesophageal junction. We report a case of gastric carcinoma in a 13-year-old girl, who was referred to our service with weakness, malaise, weight loss, and slight
dysphagia
. An upper endoscopy with biopsy revealed a gastric Borrmann III tumor, with invasion of the distal esophagus; histopathological analysis revealed a moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma. During staging, she was diagnosed with several metastases, including the lymph nodes, liver, spleen, and ovary. She was referred for radiochemotherapy and died within 4 months. We should consider and investigate the possibility of malignancy even in young patients with persistent symptoms or anemia, in order to diagnose this malignancy at earlier stages.
Gastric Cancer
2004
PMID:Gastric carcinoma in a 13-year-old girl. 1544 8
Extremely well-differentiated adenocarcinoma (EWDA) is an unusual
gastric cancer
that is histologically too bland to be diagnosed as malignant neoplasm, particularly using biopsy. EWDA may be a gastric counterpart of 'adenoma malignum' or minimal deviation adenocarcinoma (MDA) in the uterine cervix; however, the clinicopathological features of EWDA remain less apparent than those of MDA. A 60-year-old male was complaining of
dysphagia
. He had been made aware of a small submucosal tumor in the cardia 2 years before the onset of this symptom. Endoscopic ultrasonographic examination revealed a large cardiac tumor consisting of thickened layers, as observed in Borrmann type IV. Three mucosal biopsies suggested only benign changes including adenoma and hyperplastic polyps. At the fourth biopsy, cytologically bland columnar cells were located in the submucosa along with stromal fibrosis and laminated stones. The possibility that non-neoplastic aberrant pancreas with lithiasis formed the tumor was denied at laparotomy by a frozen section that revealed benign-looking glands invading the diaphragm. Immunohistochemically the cancer glands were positive for CA19-9 and human gastric mucin, but not for p53 or MUC2. To our knowledge, this is a previously unknown combination of EWDA and psammomatous calcification in the stomach.
...
PMID:Extremely well-differentiated adenocarcinoma of the gastric cardia: a unique case with columnar cells and laminated stones. 1553 29
A 74-year-old man, who had previously received curative distal gastrectomy for
gastric cancer
, was admitted to our hospital with severe
dysphagia
and weight loss. Barium swallow examination revealed the esophagus to have the corkscrew appearance characteristic of diffuse esophageal spasm (DES). This diagnosis was confirmed by esophageal manometry, which revealed intermittent, simultaneous, high-amplitude (30-100 mmHg) contractions after 65% of wet swallows. The muscle layer was also found to be thickened throughout the spastic region. Long esophagomyotomy with fundoplication was performed after treatment with medication proved ineffective. Myotomy proceeded superiorly to the area under aortic arch and inferiorly 3 cm into the cardiac portion. Fluoroscopy of the esophagus after the operation showed the spastic changes to be absent, and the patient showed improved clinical signs. We therefore recommend long myotomy of the esophageal wall with antireflux surgery for DES with sever
dysphagia
that is resistant to conservative treatment.
...
PMID:Successful surgical treatment for diffuse esophageal spasm. 1582 1
A rare case of double cancer with situs ambiguus with polysplenia is presented. A 58-year-old patient was initially diagnosed with an early
gastric cancer
. On evaluation, the computed tomography of the abdomen demonstrated situs ambiguus with polysplenia. We performed a subtotal gastrectomy with the stomach being reconstructed in a Billroth-II fashion. Three months after the operation, he again visited our department complaining nausea and
dysphagia
. Examinations confirmed the other oesophageal malignancy with advanced stage. Because of unfamiliarity to situs anomaly and rarity of double cancer, we missed the other coexistent cancer. This is the first case presentation of a double carcinoma occurring in a patient with situs ambiguus with polysplenia. The literature is reviewed and the importance of preoperative evaluation is discussed.
...
PMID:Double cancer of the stomach and oesophagus with situs ambiguus with polysplenia: the importance of preoperative evaluation. 1602 1
Plummer-Vinson syndrome (sideropenic
dysphagia
) is characterized by
dysphagia
due to an upper esophageal or hypopharyngeal web in patients with chronic iron deficiency anemia. The main cause of
dysphagia
is the presence of the web in the cervical esophagus, and abnormal motility of the pharynx or esophagus is also found to play a significant role in this condition. This syndrome is thought to be precancerous because squamous cell carcinoma of hypopharynx, oral cavity or esophagus takes place in 10% of those patients suffering from this malady, but it is even more unusual that Plummer-Vinson syndrome should be accompanied by
gastric cancer
. We have reported here a case of a 43-year-old woman with Plummer-Vinson syndrome who developed
stomach cancer
and recovered after a radical total gastrectomy with D2 nodal dissection.
...
PMID:Gastric cancer occurring in a patient with Plummer-Vinson syndrome: a case report. 1643 16
A total of 10,000 patients underwent upper gastrointestinal endosopy examination between August 1979 and October 1994 at Tikur Anbessa Hospital, Addis Ababa. The major indications were dyspepsia (59.4%), upper gastrointestinal bleeding (18%) and liver disease (10.8%). The other indications include
dysphagia
(2.2%), gastric outlet obstruction (2.1%), postoperative dyspeptic symptoms (1.9%), weight loss and/or anemia (1.4%), epigastric mass (0.6%) and odynophagia 0.2%. The mean age of the patients and their sex ratio was 36 years and 2:1, respectively. Twenty eight percent of the patients had normal findings. The commonest abnormal findings include duodenal ulcer (41%), esophageal varices (9%), acute gastritis (6%), duodenitis (3.4%), and reflux esophagitis (2.3%). Benign gastric ulcer was rare. The ratio of duodenal ulcer to gastric ulcer was 19.1%. Duodenal ulcer (45.6%), esophageal varices (15.6) and acute gastritis (5.7%) were found to be the commonest causes of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The endoscopy or histology diagnosis of cancer in both the esophagus and stomach was 2.8% and 1.3%, respectively. The agreement between endoscopy and histology in the diagnosis of esophageal and
gastric cancer
was 80%. There was no major complication related to endoscopy or premeditation. Endoscopy is a fairly accurate and safe procedure and therefore should be available and applied widely for the diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal diseases in Ethiopia.
...
PMID:Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy: a review of 10,000 cases. 1689 26
Scientific evidence based on controlled clinical research confirm substantial benefits resulting from the eradication of H. pylori infection in such pathologies of the alimentary tract as: gastric peptic and duodenal ulcer (active or confirmed in the future and ulcer disease complications), MALT (Mucosa Associated Limphoid Tissue) lymphoma, atrophic gastritis, past stomach resection,
gastric cancer
in the family. The above group of indications is strongly recommended for eradicative treatment. During the last several years there have been many guidelines made by international and national specialist groups. "Test and treat" strategy of undiagnosed dyspepsia treatment is based on possibility to carry out non-invasive tests confirming H. pylori infection. First symptoms of dyspepsia in people over 45 years of age constitute recommendation for endoscopy, as well as symptoms assumed to be "alarming" (loss of weight, anaemia, bloody vomiting, tarry stool,
dysphagia
) regardless of patient age. An individual approach to eradication is proposed in gastroesophageal reflux disease, and use of non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs. Antibacterial activity towards H. pylori is shown by many antibiotics (amoxicillin, macrolides, tetracyclines) and some other chemotherapeutic agents (nitroimidazoles) and bismuth. PPIs are recommended, because through increase of pH in stomach they create conditions to act for antibiotics. During the stage of first line triple therapy, it is advised to apply PPI and two antibacterial medicines at the same time (PPI + amoxicillin+metronidazole or clarithromycin). Such therapeutic action ensures achievement of eradication of H. pylori infection in 80-90% of cases. In case of lack of treatment efficiency in the first-line therapy, 7-14 day treatment may be repeated using triple therapies (PPI + 2 antibiotics) substituting the antibiotic with the metronidazole or tetracycline, or quadruple therapies (PPI + bismuth citrate + 2 antibiotics). Side effects during eradicative treatments occur quite rarely (from 15 to 30%).
...
PMID:Guidelines in the medical treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection. 1703 12
The relatively high incidence of
gastric cancer
in Taiwan warranted the need of a disease-specific quality of life (QOL) instrument. We translated the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-STO22 according to the guidelines from the EORTC. A total of 100 patients were interviewed. Convergent and discriminant validity, Cronbach's alpha coefficient and known-groups comparisons were used to examine the reliability and validity. We found good reliability for multi-item subscales of the QLQ-C30 and QLQ-STO22 (Cronbach's alpha coefficient: 0.70-0.94) except cognitive functioning of the QLQ-C30 and eating restriction of the QLQ-STO22. Patients in the active treatment group experienced compromised functional status and worse treatment-associated symptoms than those in the follow-up group. Similar results were found in comparisons based on Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status and
dysphagia
grades. The study has ascertained the cross-cultural validity, reliability and clinical applicability of the Taiwan Chinese version of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-STO22.
...
PMID:Quality of life of patients with gastric cancer in Taiwan: validation and clinical application of the Taiwan Chinese version of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and EORTC QLQ-STO22. 1727 9
The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcome for
gastric cancer
patients treated at a medium sized Norwegian hospital. The medical journals of all 356 patients with
gastric cancer
treated at Levanger Hospital from 1980 to 2004 were retrospectively analysed. Follow-up with regard to survival was complete. The Department of Surgery had treated 277 patients (78%). The resection rate of patients admitted to the Department of Surgery was 56% (154/277), and the total resection rate was 43% (154/356). R0 resection was done in 97 patients (27%), R1 resection in 16 (4%), palliative R2 resection in 41 (12%), other palliative procedures in 59 (17%), and only palliative care was given for 143 (40%) patients. The 30-days postoperative mortality was 2.7% (3/113) after R0 and R1 resections, 4.9% (2/41) after R2 resections, and 24% (14/59) after other palliative procedures. After R0 resections, the estimated overall 5-year survival was 39% (95% C.I. 29-49). After R1 and R2 resections, none survived 5 years and the estimated overall 2-year survival was 12% (95% C.I. 0-27%) and 2% (95% C.I. 0-7%), respectively. Estimated overall 5-year survival was closely related to stage: 91% (95% C.I. 74-100) in stage 1A, 64% (95% C.I. 53-74) in stage 1B, 27% (95% C.I. 10-44) in stage II, 18% (95% C.I. 4-32) in stage IIIA, and none in stages IIIB and IV.
Dysphagia
, fatigue, weight loss, palpable tumour, ascites and anaemia were related to a bad prognosis. Dyspepsia, vomiting and hematemesis were not related to the prognosis. Symptoms duration > 6 months were related to a better prognosis than short duration of symptoms < 2 months. The results from this hospital are in accordance with previous reports from the Western world.
...
PMID:Short and long-term survival from gastric cancer. A population-based study from a county hospital during 25 years. 1745 Apr 65
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