Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients with clinically evident medullary thyroid cancer should have a total extracapsular thyroidectomy with bilateral central neck dissection and an ipsilateral prophylactic or therapeutic modified (functional) radical neck dissection when the primary tumor is greater than 1 cm and when the central neck nodes are positive. A prophylactic contralateral neck dissection should be done when the primary tumor is bilateral and when there is extensive lymphadenopathy on the side of the primary tumor. Patients who have gross, unresectable residual medullary thyroid cancer should receive postoperative external radiotherapy. Patients who are carriers of germ-line RET proto-oncogene point mutations or have an elevated (basal or stimulated) calcitonin levels on screening should have a prophylactic total thyroidectomy before age 6 years. In patients with an elevated basal or stimulated plasma calcitonin level and an intrathyroidal nodule on ultrasound, a total thyroidectomy and central neck lymph node dissection should be done. Patients with persistent or recurrent medullary thyroid cancer should have a complete thyroidectomy (if not done initially) and bilateral central and modified radical neck dissection, including upper mediastinal lymphadenectomy. Patients who are symptomatic from distant medullary thyroid cancer metastases (diarrhea, flushing, weight loss, or bone pain) should be treated with somatostatin analogs. Bone metastases should be resected if possible, and symptomatic lesions that are unresectable should be treated with external radiotherapy. Cytoreductive procedures such as radiofrequency ablation or cryoablation for liver metastases should be considered in symptomatic patients to reduce tumor burden. Localized pulmonary metastases should be resected. Chemotherapy or radioactive immunotherapy (iodine 131 labeled carcinoembryonic antigen monoclonal antibody) protocols should be considered in patients with nonoperative widely metastatic progressing medullary thyroid cancer.
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PMID:Medullary thyroid cancer. 1205 61

A 42-year old woman presented with headache, palpitation and facial flushing. Ultrasonograms and computed tomograms revealed tumors in both of the adrenal glands, anterior aspect of the inferior vena cava, and the right lobe of the thyroid gland. Fine needle aspiration biopsy of the thyroid nodule revealed papillary thyroid carcinoma. Serum calcitonin, CEA, intact PTH and calcium levels were within normal limits. Markedly elevated levels of urinary normetanephrine and vanillylmandelic acid, and the result of 131I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (131I-MIBG) scintigraphy indicated that both adrenal masses were pheochromocytoma. Bilateral adrenalectomy, paracaval mass removal and total thyroidectomy together with central lymph node dissection were performed. The final pathological diagnosis was bilateral adrenal pheochromocytoma, paraganglioma, papillary thyroid carcinoma and either parathyroid adenoma or hyperplasia. Analysis of the RET proto-oncogene mutation, von Hippel Lindau mutation, succinate dehydrogenase subunit B mutation, and succinate dehydrogenase subunit D mutation yielded negative results. The relationship of these lesions could not be determined. This is the first report of a combination of bilateral pheochromocytoma, abdominal paraganglioma, papillary thyroid carcinoma and either parathyroid adenoma or hyperplasia without hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:Bilateral pheochromocytoma associated with paraganglioma and papillary thyroid carcinoma: report of an unusual case. 1726 67