Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Accurate evaluation of the retrobulbar orbit tumors and obtaining similar radiologic and histopathologic diagnosis are the most important for the therapeutic management. The authors analysed a group of 124 patients undergoing orbital CT exams and subsequently surgical procedure. They differentiated and described typical CT images of cavernous angioma, malignant lymphoma, optic glioma and dermoid cyst of orbit in correlation with the clinical data.
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PMID:[Computed tomography images of selected retrobulbar orbit tumors]. 1110 66

Brainstem vascular malformations can sometimes simulate other conditions such as multiple sclerosis and pontine glioma. We report a case of brainstem cavernous angioma for which clinical course and radiologic appearance were suggestive of a pontine glioma. The diagnosis was uncertain until the clinical and radiologic evolution made it clear that the patient had a cavernous angioma. We suggest that brainstem angioma be considered as a differential diagnosis for pontine glioma.
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PMID:Cavernous angioma of the brain stem simulating diffuse pontine glioma. 1151 Sep 38

The fact that some brain tumors show hypo- or isometabolism on fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) has caused problems in the detection of primary or recurrent tumors and in the differentiation from benign lesions. We investigated the usefulness of carbon-11 methionine PET in characterizing brain lesions under these conditions. 11C-methionine PET was performed in 45 patients with brain lesions (in 34 for initial diagnosis and in 11 for detection of recurrence) that showed hypo- or isometabolism compared with normal brain tissue on FDG PET. Ten minutes after the injection of 555-740 MBq of 11C-methionine, attenuation-corrected brain images were obtained with a dedicated PET scanner. The brain lesions comprised 24 gliomas, five metastatic brain tumors, four meningiomas, two other brain tumors and ten benign lesions (including three cases of cysticercosis, two cases of radiation necrosis, one tuberculous granuloma, one hemangioma, one benign cyst, and one organizing infarction). Proliferative activity was measured using the Ki-67 immunostaining method in glioma tissues. Thirty-one of 35 brain tumors (89% sensitivity) showed increased 11C-methionine uptake despite iso- or hypometabolism on FDG PET. By contrast, all ten benign lesions showed decreased or normal 11C-methionine uptake (100% specificity). Twenty-two of 24 gliomas (92%) showed increased 11C-methionine uptake, the extent and degree of which exceeded 18F-FDG uptake, and the 11C-methionine uptake correlated with the proliferation index (r=0.67). The mean (+/-SD) uptake ratios of glioma to normal brain on FDG and 11C-methionine PET were 0.92+/-0.34 and 2.54+/-1.25, respectively. All metastatic tumors except one showed intense 11C-methionine uptake in the entire tumor or in the peripheral margin of the tumor. In meningiomas, 11C-methionine uptake showed a variable increase. In conclusion, brain lesions that show hypo- or isometabolism on FDG PET can be detected and differentiated with high sensitivity and good contrast using 11C-methionine PET. 11C-methionine PET can provide additional information when used in combination with FDG PET in the evaluation of these patients.
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PMID:Usefulness of 11C-methionine PET in the evaluation of brain lesions that are hypo- or isometabolic on 18F-FDG PET. 1192 79

Vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-cadherin) is an endothelial-specific, trans-membrane protein that promotes homophilic cell adhesion. Inhibition of VE-cadherin by the blocking monoclonal antibody (mAb) BV13 inhibited angiogenesis and tumor growth in vivo. However, this effect was accompanied by a marked increase in lung and heart permeability. In the present paper, we characterize a different VE-cadherin mAb (BV14) that is able to inhibit angiogenesis without affecting vascular permeability. In vitro studies show that BV14, in contrast to BV13, did not increase paracellular permeability of endothelial monolayers and did not disrupt VE-cadherin clusters at junctions. However, both antibodies could inhibit formation of vascularlike structures in collagen gels and increase migration of endothelial cells into wounded areas. In vivo, BV14 and BV13 were equally active in inhibiting angiogenesis in the mouse cornea and in reducing the growth of hemangioma and C6 glioma. In contrast to BV13, BV14 did not change vascular permeability in all the organs tested and at any dose used. BV14 and BV13 bind to VE-cadherin extracellular repeats EC4 and EC1, respectively. We propose that, in resting vessels, where junctions are stable and well-structured, antibody binding to EC1 but not EC4 disrupts their organization and increases permeability. In contrast, in growing vessels, where endothelial cells are migrating and junctions are weaker, antibody binding to EC4 may be sufficient to disrupt cell-to-cell adhesion and inhibit assembly of new vascular structures.
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PMID:A monoclonal antibody to vascular endothelial-cadherin inhibits tumor angiogenesis without side effects on endothelial permeability. 1213 May 1

This study was undertaken to assess the contribution of the combination of (201)Tl SPECT and (99m)TcO(4)(-)SPECT to the differential diagnosis of brain tumors and tumor-like lesions. In the 8 patients selected for this study, both (201)Tl SPECT and (99m)TcO(4)(-) SPECT were performed because of clinical or radiological suspicion of brain tumor, no therapy was initiated before either SPECTs, diagnosis was based on biopsy, and MRI findings were stable in the interval between SPECTs. Histological diagnoses consisted of low grade glioma (n=1), high grade glioma (n=2), lymphoma (n=1), metastasis (n=1), multiple sclerosis (n=2) and cavernous angioma (n=1). Two high grade astrocytomas, one malignant lymphoma and one metastatic tumor showed (201)Tl accumulation and were diagnosed as tumor. The combination of (201)Tl and (99m)TcO(4)(-) did not change the diagnosis. One cavernous angioma showed no (201)Tl accumulation and was diagnosed as non-tumor. The combination of (201)Tl and (99m)TcO(4)(-) did not change the diagnosis. One low grade astrocytoma showed faint (201)Tl accumulation and was diagnosed as non-tumor. As (201)Tl uptake was higher than (99m)TcO(4)(-) uptake, the combination of (201)Tl and (99m)TcO(4)(-) changed the diagnosis to tumor. Two multiple sclerosis showed (201)Tl accumulation and were diagnosed as tumor. As (99m)TcO(4)(-) uptake was higher than (201)Tl uptake, the combination of (201)Tl and (99m)TcO(4)(-) changed the diagnosis to non-tumor. In three of the eight patients (38%), the combination of (201)Tl SPECT and (99m)TcO(4)(-) SPECT altered the diagnosis made by (201)Tl SPECT alone. In all of these three cases, the diagnosis made by the combination of (201)Tl SPECT and (99m)TcO(4)(-) SPECT was correct.
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PMID:Contribution of the combination of (201)Tl SPECT and (99m)T(c)O(4)(-) SPECT to the differential diagnosis of brain tumors and tumor-like lesions. A preliminary report. 1271 94

We report the unusual case of a patient with neurofibromatosis type I, who was irradiated 16 years previously for a mesencephalic glioma causing hydrocephalus, and who developed a cerebellar haemorrhage caused by a histologically confirmed cavernous angioma, that was invisible on several earlier MRI scans. The different hypotheses concerning the de novo formation of cavernous angiomas (venous obstructive disease and genetic abnormalities) are succinctly reviewed.
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PMID:Acquired cerebellar cavernous angioma following childhood radiotherapy in a patient with neurofibromatosis type 1. 1289 5

Five newborns, 4 girls and 1 boy, presented with breathing and feeding difficulties caused by obstruction of the nose. The causes were choanal atresia, apertura pyriformis stenosis, teratoma, glioma and haemangioma. Following surgical treatment the children were symptom-free. Rapid diagnosis and treatment of these conditions are essential. An alternative airway should be created if a newborn suffers from breathing problems. Diagnostic work-up includes flexible laryngo-endoscopy followed by MRI- or CT-scan. Treatment is usually surgical.
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PMID:[Obstruction of the nose in newborns]. 1519 57

Hemorrhage into the structures of the anterior visual pathway, apoplexy of the chiasma or optic nerves, is a rare pathology that can be caused by different pathological processes among which cavernous angioma and arteriovenous malformation are more frequently mentioned. The cause of chiasmatic apoplexy may be also hemorrhage into the tumor--chiasmatic glioma of blood penetration into the chiasma in pituitary apoplexy. The authors describe a rare case of chiasmatic apoplexy whose cause was chiasmatic cavernoma. In addition to acute visual disorders suggesting the involvement of the left optic nerve, chiasma, and left visual pathway, 23-year-old patient had endocrine disorders as polyuria, polydipsia, which first suggests craniopharyngioma and glioma of the chiasma. A capsule and hematomic clots were removed from the thickened left optic nerve and left chiasmatic half during surgery. Only did a morphological study involving immunohistochemical analysis permit identification of the process as hemorrhage from cavernous micromalformation with the formation of hematoma.
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PMID:[Chiasmatic cavernoma]. 1607 30

PHACE syndrome consists of the constellation of manifestations including Posterior fossa anomalies of the brain (most commonly Dandy-Walker malformations), Hemangiomas of the face and scalp, Arterial abnormalities, Cardiac defects, and Eye anomalies. We present the case of a patient who presented with respiratory distress at birth secondary to a large nasal glioma. She was subsequently found to have a ventricular septal defect (VSD), a facial hemangioma, and a malformation of the eye and optic nerve head. The nasal glioma, which extended to the cribriform plate, has not been described in this syndrome. The tumor was resected through a coronal incision, midline nasal bone osteotomy, and a retrograde dissection from the nasal bones to the anterior skull base. Glioma of the skull base is a novel and serious manifestation of this uncommon condition.
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PMID:PHACE syndrome: report of a case with a glioma of the anterior skull base and ocular malformations. 1614 20

Facial swelling is a common clinical problem in pediatric patients. The causes of swelling are diverse, and knowledge of the typical clinical and imaging manifestations and the most common sites of occurrence of these conditions is needed to formulate a differential diagnosis. The general clinical manifestations may be classified into the following four groups: (a) acute swelling with inflammation, (b) nonprogressive swelling, (c) slowly progressive swelling, and (d) rapidly progressive swelling. Conditions that may account for acute swelling accompanied by inflammation include lymphadenitis, sinusitis, odontogenic infection, and abscess. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography is the modality of choice for detection of abscesses requiring surgical drainage. Nonprogressive midfacial swelling is suggestive of a congenital anomaly (eg, a cephalocele, nasal glioma, or nasal dermoid or epidermoid cyst). Slowly progressive swelling may indicate the presence of a neurofibroma, hemangioma, lymphangioma, vascular malformation, or pseudocyst, or of fibrous dysplasia. The differential diagnosis for rapidly progressive facial swelling in association with cranial nerve deficits should include rhabdomyosarcoma, Langerhans cell histiocytosis, Ewing sarcoma, osteogenic sarcoma, and metastatic neuroblastoma.
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PMID:Causes of facial swelling in pediatric patients: correlation of clinical and radiologic findings. 1641 50


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