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)

An operated case of cerebral paragonimiasis miyazakii was reported. A 25-year-old man was admitted to our hospital on Jan. 25, 1982, because of weakness, sensory disorder and focal convulsion of the right upper limb. He complained of slight headache but had no sign of meningeal irritation nor inflammation. CT scan revealed a left parietal low density mass with irregular ring-like contrast enhancement. Left carotid angiogram showed stretched arteries around the mass. Laboratory findings were normal except for eosinophilie (17%). Chest X-P was normal. Operation was performed under diagnosis of glioblastoma on Aug. 6, 1982. The tumor was well-circumscribed and had a firm capsule which containing necrotic substance. The tumor was removed totally and the bone flap was also removed since slight brain swelling was seen. Histologically it proved to be a granuloma and four eggs of helminth were found in the necrotic tissue. Post operative state of the patient was satisfactory and cranioplasty was performed 3 weeks later. On Aug. 31, he began to complain of chest pain, cough and hemosputum, and chest X-P disclosed a nodular shadow in the lower lobe of the right lung. Paragonimiasis was strongly suspected because he had a history of having three fresh-water crabs (Potamon dehaani) 18 months before. But not egg was found in either sputum nor stool. Skin test with paragonimus westermani antigen was highly positive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of cerebral paragonimiasis miyazakii]. 648 96

The authors report the case of a 62-year-old woman admitted to hospital for episodes of chest pain with ischemic abnormalities at ECG without enzyme release. Coronography confirmed a normal coronary tree with mild ascending aortic dilatation. Subsequent diagnostic and clinical examinations resulted normal. Episodes of chest pain and dyspnea persisted over the following days. Administration of nitrates, calcium antagonist, diuretic, antidepressant agents for suspected syndrome X led to partial improvement of clinical symptoms. The patient was discharged from the hospital. A few days later she was referred to the neurology department because of an episode of transient dysarthria, hyposthenia and paresthesis localized to the right lower and upper limbs associated with chest pain. A brain computed tomography showed an expansive solid mass. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and stereotaxis biopsy confirmed the etiology of the lesion to be a glioblastoma. The patient died soon thereafter from respiratory and cardiocirculatory arrest.
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PMID:Brain cancer mimicking an acute coronary syndrome. 1765 27

Malignant glioblastoma multiform (GBM) is the most common primary malignancy of the brain in the U.S. Temozolomide (TMZ) is the cornerstone of management along with surgical resection and radiotherapy. Because of the reduction in the CD4+ lymphocyte count as a side effect of TMZ use, this patient population is under risk for opportunistic infections like Pneumocystis jiroveci. A male patient with newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiform presented with non-productive cough and chest pain. Before presentation, the patient received the standard therapy including surgical resection, radiation and TMZ. Computerized tomography of the chest showed a very large cavitary lesion in the upper segment of the right lower lobe and multiple nodular lesions with some starting to cavitate. Cytology of the bronchioalveolar lavage with special stain showed large, broad based budding yeast-like cells, morphologically consistent with blastomyces and macrophages filled with yeast-like forms, morphologically consistent with histoplasma. The patient was treated with intraconazole intended for 12 months. To the best of our knowledge, our case represents the first documented case of lung infection with both blastomyces and histoplasma in a patient after receiving TMZ for newly diagnosed GBM.
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PMID:Blastomycosis and Histoplasmosis in a Patient with Glioblastoma Receiving Temozolomide. 2880 10