Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (glioblastoma)
18,345 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The periods of survival which can be obtained on patients with a primary tumor of the brain after an unique or post-operative cobalt-60-irradiation is dependent of the histology: while periods of survival of several years have been obtained in case of medulloblastoma and astrocytoma, the irradiation of the multiform glioblastoma represents only a palliative measure with a temporary amelioration for any months.
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PMID:[Results of cobalt-60-irradiation of brain tumors]. 4 57

Fenestrae were found in freeze-fractured cisternae of the Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum of glioblastoma, oligodendroglioma, ependymoma, medulloblastoma, medulloepithelioma, meningioma, cerebellar sarcoma, hemangioblastoma, and chromophobe adenoma. They were about 200--400 A in diameter and often diffusely distributed or concentrated in groups in Golgi cisternae, while they were around 300--600 A in size and scattered in distribution in cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum. They appeared as conical protrusions or circular broken-off necks of face A and as circular holes on face B in tangential fractures, and as several constrictions of cisternae in cross fractures.
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PMID:Fenestrae in golgi and endoplasmic reticulum cisternae of human brain tumours. 16 55

Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFA) was assayed in nerve-tumour extracts and located in these tumours by indirect immunofluorescence study. We conclude that GFA is a specific marker of both malignant and normal astrocytes. Non-astrocytic tumours (oligodendroglioma, meningioma) do not contain GFA. Tumours with astrocytic differentiation potential (medulloblastoma) may contain GFA. Comparison of microscopic and GFA assays leads us to conclude that GFA concentration is proportional to the amount of malignant astrocytes in the tumour and inversely proportional to the necrotic area of a tumour. Normal tissue GFA and glioblastoma GFA were found to be immunologically identical.
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PMID:Glial fibrillary acidic protein in tumours of the nervous system. 33 41

Cerebrospinal fluid seeding is a well-known mode of metastasis for intracranial neoplasms such as medulloblastoma, ependymoma, and glioblastoma; however, retinoblastoma is not usually considered. The route of spread appears to be by direct extension into the optic nerve from the retina and into the meningeal spaces by extension from the choroid, or along the central retinal vessels to the subarachnoid space. Four cases are presented.
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PMID:Intraspinal metastases from retinoblastoma. 42 78

Between 1964 and 1976, we have seen 197 cases of cerebral tumors in children. We have studied the frequency of each histological group of tumors, their localization, the results of the clinical investigation, their clinical manifestations and the prognosis for each group. This study has confirmed that in children brain tumors are more frequently localized in the posterior fossa (56.4%). As in other series, tumors derived from the glia represent nearly 80% of the total. Clinically, increased intro-cranial pressure is the most frequent manifestation of posterior fossa lesion (75% of cases) while cerebellar involvement was seen in 60% of these children. Brain lesions and supratentorial tumors are more insidious in their presentation and their clinical manifestations more diversified. The EEG appeared useful in the investigation of brain tumors and showed irregularities in 78% of our patients. However, a more specific diagnosis requirelography. As in previous series, the mortality rate remained high in the children we have followed, particularly for some groups of tumors (glioblastoma, medulloblastoma, brain stem lesions). It is to be hoped that with the introduction of the CT Scan, the improvement of neurosurgical techniques and the use of immuno and chemotherapy, the prognosis may be improved.
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PMID:[Brain tumors in children in a French Canadian environment]. 48 25

Immunoelectrophoresis of extracts of 200 intracranial tumours against rabbit anti-glioblastoma serum gave positive results (= precipitation) in all cases of tumours of neuroectodermal origin such as glioblastoma, astrocytoma, oligodendroglioma, ependymoma, neurinoma, and spongioblastoma. No immunoelectrophoretic precipitation was seen for any of the tumours of mesenchymal origin, for instance meningioma and metastases of cancer. On the basis of these findings, immunoelectrophoresis is considered to be a reliable method for differentiation between tumour tissue of neuroectodermal and non-neuroectodermal origin. Among the 41 posterior fossa tumours some unusual observations were made. Cerebellar angioblastoma (Lindau tumour) showed an atypically located precipitation line, which for the present is interpreted as an immunological reaction to vascular wall tissue. Furthermore, among the group of so-called medulloblastomas, two subgroups were distinguished on the basis of three parameters. The first of these subgroups comprises tumours whose immunoelectrophoretic pattern resembles that of gliomas, which are histologically characterized by neuroectodermal structures and which occur in younger children (5--10 years). The tumours of the second subgroup, which do not show this neuroectodermal immunoelectrophoretic pattern, have a sarcomatous character histologically, and occur in patients aged between 10 and 50 years. The view that medulloblastoma comprises a number of different types of tumour seems to be confirmed by this finding.
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PMID:Immunoelectrophoresis in the diagnosis of neuroectodermal and mesodermal intracranial tumours, especially those of the posterior fossa. 57 8

Immune deficiency of immunocompetent cells or of humoral factors are essential causes of tumor growth. The authors have investigated the transfer of immunocompetent cells - allogeneic bone marrow cell transfusion and white blood cell intracranial infusion - for the treatment of 11 malignant gliomas in infants and children as an adjuvant to surgery, radiation and/or chemotherapy. Ten cases, from 3 months to 11 years, received bone marrow cell transfusion. Two medulloblastomas and 3 pontine gliomas are dead. Five cases are alive and well 37-65 months following surgery. Among these two posterior fossa neoplasms, a medulloblastoma and a glioblastoma have survived 46 and 65 months, respectively. One cerebral glioblastoma received allogeneic white blood cells infused locally into the tumor bed: it recurred 1 year following surgery, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy. Cytolysis of the tumor cells by sensitized lymphoid cells were demonstrated in this case. The role of immunotherapy should be limited at the present time to adjuvant therapy until its effect on tumor growth is statistically confirmed. The results so far are promising, and improvement of the immunological approach in treating malignant brain tumors is under way.
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PMID:Adjuvant immunotherapy for malignant brain tumors in infants and children. 110 67

This freeze-fracture study was performed in 3 astrocytomas, 6 glioblastomas, 2 ependymomas, 3 medulloblastomas, 1 cerebellar sarcoma, 3 germinomas, and 1 medulloepithelioma. The number of nuclear pores/mum2 nuclear membrane was not correlated with biological malignancy. Fracture faces A and B were discernible in nuclear, Golgi and rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER), mitochondrial surface, and plasma membranes. Fenestrae were evident in Golgi and ER membranes. The transitional zone of cristae from the inner surface membrane appeared as a circular hole and broken-off neck on faces A and B of the inner surface membrane, respectively. The decrease in number of membrane particles in the plasma membrane seemed to correlate with the frequency of metastases, and, in addition, the membrane particles appeared to cluster in glioblastoma, medulloblastoma, and medulloepithelioma. The gap junctions were abundant in astrocytomas, moderate in number in ependymomas and germinomas, and rare in glioblastomas, cerebellar sarcoma, and medulloepithelioma. Tight junctions were often found in germinomas and medulloepithelioma, and rarely in ependymomas.
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PMID:Freeze-fracture study of human brain tumors. 117 38

The authors present a retrospective study of 670 histologically verified tumours of the neuraxis collected over 90 months in the Neurological Hospital, Lyons. The main facts concerning histological type, topography of the tumour, date of diagnosis, address, profession, O.B.O. and Rhesus groups, age and sex were codified for feeding into a computer and processed by sophisticated statistical methods. This analysis shows the homogeneity of topographical distribution in the brain of the different types of glioma, the special genetic code of meningiomas (predominance of A and B genes of the A.B.O. group), absence of the same factors for glioblastoma. Sex ratio analysis shows the contrast between definitely masculine tumours--glioblastomas and astrocytomas--and meningiomas and spongioblastomas. Analysis of the "age specific rate" separates tumours prevalent in the young, where incidence is a decreasing function of age (spongioblastoma, medulloblastoma, cerebellar astrocytoma) and tumours prevalent in adults which are mainly meningiomas and glioblastomas whose incidence is an increasing exponential function of age. Epidemiological analysis shows the difference in geographical distribution of glioblastomas and meningiomas. As far as glioblastomas are concerned, it would appear that on to the general rule of constant tumourincidence over the area as a whole, is superimposed another of high incidence in particular districts of the Beaujolais and Maconnais regions. The aetiological implications of these various findings are discussed.
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PMID:[Epidemiological study of primary tumors of the neuraxis in the Rhone-Alps region. Quantitative data on the etiology and geographical distribution of 1670 tumors]. 122 81

All primary intracranial neoplasms diagnosed between 1935 and 1964, inclusive, in the well-defined populations of children under age 15 residing in the state of Connecticut and the city of Rochester, Minnesota, formed the basis for this study. The tumors occurring in this group were characterized by histologic type and by the patient's sex and the age when the tumor occurred. In Connecticut, over the 30-year period, a primary intracranial neoplasm was diagnosed in 380 patients in a mean population of 582,286 children, yielding an average annual incidence rate of 2.17 cases/100,000 population per year. Of the microscopically confirmed tumors, the most common, in order, were medulloblastoma (24.2%), astrocytoma (20.6%), glioblastoma (20.3%), ependymoma (6.5%), craniopharyngioma (5.6%) and meningioma (4.6%). These figures contrast sharply with the corresponding frequency of these tumors in the adult Connecticut population. In Rochester during the same years, 12 primary intracranial neoplasms occurred in a mean population of 7,981 children, yielding an average annual incidence rate of 5.01 cases/100,000 population per year.
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PMID:The epidemiology of primary intracranial neoplasms of childhood. A population study. 124 98


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