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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Disparities in manpower and facilities notwithstanding, neuroepidemiology might explain the observed differences in the mix of neurosurgical caseload in different parts of the world. The highest incidence rate of primary intracranial tumor was in Europe and the lowest rate in Africa.
Glioma
was more common in the West,
teratoma
in Japan and the Far East and meningioma in Africa. The lowest rates of childhood brain tumors were in South America, Africa and Asia. Stroke rates were very high in Finland and China. Blacks, Japanese and Chinese had more intracranial vascular occlusive disease while whites had more extracranial disease. Finland had a very high SAH incidence rate but the Middle East and Africa had low rates and a reversal of the aneurysm: AVM ratio. Highest incidence rates of neural tube defects occurred in countries where consanguineous marriages are common. Brain abscess, tuberculoma and other granulomas from infestations were preponderant in developing countries. Head injuries accounted for up to 40% of all neurosurgical admissions in some developing countries. Outside the USA and South Africa, civilian gunshot injuries were uncommon.
...
PMID:Geographical neurosurgery. 1010 Feb 2
Central diabetes insipidus (DI) can be the outcome of a number of diseases that affect the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal axis. The causes of the condition can be classified as traumatic, inflammatory, or neoplastic. Traumatic causes include postoperative sella or transection of the pituitary stalk, while infectious or inflammatory causes include meningitis, lymphocytic hypophysitis, and granulomatous inflammations such as sarcoidosis and Wegener's granulomatosis. Various neoplastic conditions such as germinoma, Langerhans cell histiocytosis, metastasis, leukemic infiltration, lymphoma,
teratoma
, pituitary adenoma, craniopharyngioma, Rathke cleft cyst, hypothalamic
glioma
, and meningioma are also causes of central DI. In affected patients, careful analysis of these MR imaging features and correlation with the clinical manifestations can allow a more specific diagnosis, which is essential for treatment.
...
PMID:MR imaging of central diabetes insipidus: a pictorial essay. 1175 30
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.
...
PMID:[Obstruction of the nose in newborns]. 1519 57
The upper airway extends from the nasal aperture to the subglottis and can be the site of multiple types of congenital malformations leading to anatomical or functional obstruction. This can cause severe respiratory distress. Newborns are obligate nasal breathers; therefore nasal obstruction can lead to airway compromise and respiratory distress. The etiologies are varied and include, choanal atresia, pyriform aperture stenosis, and rarely tumors such as
glioma
, encephalocele,
teratoma
, or dermoid. More common upper airway congenital anomalies include laryngomalacia, vocal cord paralysis, and subglottic stenosis. Laryngolmalacia is the most common congenital laryngeal anomaly. Inspiratory stridor often does not present until two weeks after birth and resolves by 18 months of age. Most cases are managed with watchful waiting. Severe cases require a surgical intervention. Bilateral vocal cord paralysis is usually idiopathic. In certain cases, paralysis may occur secondary to central nervous system abnormality including Arnold-Chiari malformation, cerebral palsy, hydrocephalus, myelomeningocele, spina bifida, or hypoxia. Severe cases may necessitate endotracheal intubation and tracheostomy. Congenital subglottic stenosis is the third most common laryngeal anomaly. It is defined as a diameter of less than 4mm of the cricoid region in a full-term infant, and less than 3mm in a premature infant. This condition is the most common laryngeal anomaly that requires tracheotomy in newborns. Laryngotracheoplasty may be required to achieve decanulation. Knowledge of the upper airway embryological development and congenital anomalies is off prime importance in assessing the newborn with respiratory distress. In most cases flexible endoscopy establishes the diagnosis. Management is tailored to each condition and its degree of severity.
...
PMID:The upper airway: congenital malformations. 1679 87
Teratomas
represent 0.5% of all intracranial tumors. These benign tumors contain tissue representative of the three germinal layers. Most teratomas are midline tumors located predominantly in the sellar and pineal regions. The presence of a
teratoma
in the cavernous sinus is very rare. Congenital teratomas are also rare, especially those of a cystic nature. To our knowledge, this would be the first case report of a congenital, rapidly growing cystic
teratoma
within the cavernous sinus. A three-month-old boy presented with a past medical history of easy irritability and poor oral intake. A magnetic resonance image (MRI) scan of the head disclosed a large expanding cystic tumor filling the right cavernous sinus and extending into the pterygopalatine fossa through the foramen rotunda. These scans also demonstrated a small area of mixed signal intensity, the result of the different tissue types conforming to the tumor. Heterogeneous enhancement was seen after the infusion of contrast medium. However, this was a cystic tumor with a large cystic portion. Thus, a presumptive diagnosis of cystic
glioma
was made. With the use of a right frontotemporal approach, extradural dissection of the tumor was performed. The lesion entirely occupied the cavernous sinus, medially displacing the Gasserian ganglion and trigeminal branches (predominantly V1 and V2). The lesion was composed of different tissues, including fat, muscle and mature, brain-like tissue. The tumor was completely removed, and the pathological report confirmed the diagnosis of a mature
teratoma
. There was no evidence of recurrence. Despite the location of the lesion in the cavernous sinus, total removal can be achieved with the use of standard microsurgical techniques.
...
PMID:Congenital cavernous sinus cystic teratoma. 1772 46
Fetal intracranial tumors are rare. The diagnosis is generally made on histology after birth. The aim of this study was to analyze clinical and imaging data in a series of fetal intracranial tumors and emphasize the findings that may help approach the diagnosis antenatally. We retrospectively analyzed imaging and clinical findings in 27 cases of fetal intracranial tumors assessed by ultrasound (27/27) and MR imaging (24/27). A histological diagnosis was always obtained. Main diagnoses included 15 germinal tumors (13 teratomas), 4
glial tumors
, 2 craniopharyngiomas and 3 hamartomas. Average gestational age at diagnosis was 27 weeks for teratomas, 21 weeks for hamartomas and 34 weeks for
glial tumors
. All tumors but one were supra tentorial, and the lesion extended in the posterior fossa in two teratomas. A heterogeneous pattern, which was more frequently seen in teratomas, was better visualized by MR than US imaging. In addition, in two cases of teratomas, MR imaging better assessed the extension of the tumor.
Teratomas
and gliomas are the most frequent brain tumors in the fetus. US and MR imagings appear complementary in the prenatal assessment of these lesions.
...
PMID:Fetal intracranial tumors: a review of 27 cases. 1845 6
In this study, we present statistical analyses of pineal tumors based on the data from Brain Tumor Registry of Japan. The most frequent tumor in the pineal region was germinoma, and it accounted for 49.2% of all pineal tumors; it was followed by pineocytoma (8.5%),
glioma
(6.5%), pineoblastoma (5.1%), malignant
teratoma
(5.2%) and
teratoma
(5.1%). Germinoma is most frequent among patients between 10 and 19 years of age, and there are some patients aged >30 years; however, there are few patients with choriocarcinoma, embryonal carcinoma, and yolk sac tumor who are aged >30 years. Pineoblastoma is most frequent among patients under 5 years of age, while pineocytoma is evenly distributed in patients between 10 and 60 years of age. The 5-year survival rate of germinoma was 89.4%, while those of embryonal carcinoma, yolk sac tumor and choriocarcinoma were 35.3, 37.3 and 58.1%, respectively.
...
PMID:Statistical analysis of pineal tumors based on the data of Brain Tumor Registry of Japan. 1932 57
Following extensive suprasellar operations for excision of hypothalamic tumors, some patients develop morbid obesity, the so-called hypothalamic obesity (HyOb). HyOb complicates disorders related to the hypothalamus, including those that cause structural damage to the hypothalamus, pituitary macroadenoma with suprasellar extension,
glioma
, meningioma,
teratoma
, germ cell tumors, radiotherapy, Prader-Willi syndrome, and mutations in leptin, leptin receptor, POMC, MC4R and CART genes. It is conceivable that a subgroup of patients with 'simple obesity' also have HyOb. The hypothalamus regulates body weight by precisely balancing the intake of food, energy expenditure and body fat tissue. Orexigenic and anorexigenic hypothalamic centers (hyperphagia when impaired) play a central role, connecting to adipose tissue by means of an intricate efferent and afferent signals circuit. Other mechanisms by which the brain regulates adipose tissue and beta cells of the pancreas include the sympathetic nervous system, vagally mediated hyperinsulinemia and the endocrine system, namely growth hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone and the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. Corticotropin-releasing hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone glucocorticoids and the 11beta-HSD-1 shuttle regulate lipolysis both directly and indirectly. All the above mechanisms may be impaired in HyOb. Management of HyOb targets the major manifestations: hyperphagia, autonomic dysfunction, hyperinsulinemia and impaired energy expenditure. Individual variation is considerable. Satisfactory therapy is currently unavailable.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic obesity. 1995 67
A 5-month-old boy presented with a rare case of intramedullary
teratoma
extending from T1 to S5 and associated with a lumbosacral lipoma. Magnetic resonance imaging showed the tumor extended over the lipoma. Since the tumor could not be clearly demarcated from the spinal cord, surgery was performed under a preoperative diagnosis of spinal
glioma
. The lack of demarcation made safe resection of the tumor difficult to perform, so that the tumor was only partially removed by decompressing the spinal cord. The histological diagnosis was mature
teratoma
. This case was likely the result of some dysembryogenetic mechanism and the tumor was not neoplastic. The long-term outcome cannot yet be determined, but no recurrence of the symptoms has been observed for 3 years. Spinal intramedullary
teratoma
is rare and tends to be located in the lumbosacral region. Surgical intervention is crucial and total removal may be achievable, but is likely to be partial with tight adhesion to the spinal cord, so that aggressive approaches should be avoided in such cases.
...
PMID:An infantile large and extensive intramedullary mature spinal teratoma. 2161 70
The 2-amino-5-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-1,3,4-thiadiazole set are well known compounds with interesting in vitro and in vivo anti-cancer profiles. The aim of this study was an in vitro evaluation of the anti-cancer activity of a new synthesized aminothiadiazole derivative 2-(3-chlorophenyloamino)-5-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)- -1,3,4-thiadiazole 4ClABT. The effect on tumor cell proliferation, motility and morphology, DNA synthesis as well as the influence on normal cells was assessed. The antiproliferative activity of 4ClABT in tumor cells derived from peripheral cancers including breast carcinoma (T47D), colon carcinoma (HT-29), thyroid carcinoma (FTC-238),
teratoma
(P19), and T-cell leukemia (Jurkat E6.1), as well as cancers of the nervous system including rhabdomyosarcoma/medulloblastoma (TE671), brain astrocytoma (MOGGCCM) and
glioma
(C6) was studied by means of MTT assay. DNA synthesis level was determined in BrdU ELISA test. Wound assay model was applied for tumor cell motility assessment. Morphological changes induced by 4ClABT in cancer and normal cells were analyzed in HE staining specimens. Moreover, the influence of 4ClABT on normal cells including skin fibroblasts (HSF), hepatocytes (Fao), astroglia and neurons was studied by means of LDH assay. The tested compound inhibited the proliferation of tumor cells in dose-dependent fashion. The anti-cancer effect was attributed to decreased DNA synthesis, prominent changes in tumor cell morphology as well as reduced cell motility. In antiproliferative concentrations, 4ClABT was not toxic to normal cells. Our study showed prominent anti-cancer effects of the tested aminothiadiazole derivative in the absence of toxicity in normal cells. The obtained results confirmed the promising anti-cancer profile of previously tested 2-(monohalogenphenylamino)- -5-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-1,3,4-thiadiazole derivatives (ClABT - chlorophenyl derivative, FABT and 3FABT - fluorophenyl derivatives and 4BrABT - bromophenyl derivative). The molecular mechanisms and the in vivo activity of aminothiadiazole derivatives will be the subject of further studies.
...
PMID:The activity of a new 2-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazole derivative 4ClABT in cancer and normal cells. 2203 23
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