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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 21-year-old woman was diagnosed with Turcot's syndrome (TS) at age 16 years. She had two ependymomas, one was located in the left middle cerebellar peduncle and the other in the low sacral spinal canal. Her mother and brother both had colectomies for colonic
polyposis
. Her maternal uncle and grandfather also had this disease and both died from cancer of the colon in their fourth decade of life. The patient was found to have hyperpigmented spots in the retina, skull osteomas and normal neurological examinations. The bone scan and CSF were normal and she had a germline mutation in the segment 3 of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene. Following partial resection of the two ependymomas, she was treated with radiation and chemotherapy. One year after surgery, paraspinal desmoid tumors were found and removed. She is presently 42 months postsurgical resection of the neural tumors and has remained central nervous system tumor-free. The occurrence of multiple ependymoma in TS has not been reported, and the control of this patient's ependymomas is consistent with other reports of long-term survival with TS and
glial tumors
.
...
PMID:Multiple ependymomas in a patient with Turcot's syndrome. 895 Mar 38
The Turcot syndrome has been defined as the simultaneous presence of multiple
polyposis
of the colon and a malignant brain tumor. This association is supposed to be genetically transmitted, even though we still do not exactly know whether this occurs in a dominant or recessive way. The case of a 47-year-old man submitted to a right hemicolectomy for cancer and
polyposis
, following a series of endoscopic polypectomies and, finally, removal of left temporal
glioma
is here presented.
...
PMID:Turcot syndrome: case report and nosological aspects. 950 20
Typical Turcot's syndrome is characterized by the association of a brain
glioma
together with multiple colonic
polyposis
, in which the number of polypoid lesions is small and the association of colonic cancer occurs at a younger age than in familial adenomatous polyposis. We describe a family in which both the father and his son presented with typical Turcot's syndrome without parental consanguinity. This is the first report of a family that is considered to follow an autosomal dominant inheritance. After reviewing 25 documented cases in which the average age of death was 20.3 years old, it was learned that the major cause of death was brain tumor (76 percent) and the minor cause was colon cancer (16 percent). Patients were very young and, therefore, unlikely to have produced a child before their death. These facts seem to support the theory that Turcot's syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder.
...
PMID:A father and son with Turcot's syndrome: evidence for autosomal dominant inheritance: report of two cases. 1021 61
We report herein the case of a 16-year-old boy diagnosed as having Turcot syndrome, otherwise known as
glioma
-
polyposis
syndrome. The patient was transferred from the Department of Neurosurgery where he was undergoing investigation of a brain tumor, to the Department of Medicine for investigation of gastrointestinal symptoms. The patient was diagnosed as having Turcot syndrome, and was then transferred to the Department of Surgery for treatment of an obstruction in the sigmoid colon and small intestinal invagination. A subtotal colectomy with side-to-end ileoproctostomy and release of the invaginations was carried out.
Multiple polyps
were found in the colon, two of which, including a large polyp that obstructed the colonic lumen, were confirmed histologically to be adenocarcinoma. The remaining polyps were adenomas. A biopsy of the brain tumor confirmed a diagnosis of astrocytoma (WHO grade II). This case report describes the characteristic features of Turcot syndrome presented by this patient.
...
PMID:Turcot syndrome with colonic obstruction and small intestinal invagination: report of a case. 1048 58
A fibroglandular hamartoma of the nasal cavity was found in a patient with nasal
polyposis
. The only symptom had been bilateral nasal obstruction for years. The tumor was removed by lateral rhinotomy. Our initial differential diagnosis included nasal
glioma
and inverted papilloma, but this rare tumor was not suspected. Four years after surgery, the patient is well and the risk of recurrence is deemed to be very low. Surgeons and pathologists must be aware of these and other uncommon tumors of the nose because some may require special diagnostic and therapeutic procedures.
...
PMID:[Fibroglandular hamartoma of the nasal cavity: case description and review]. 1100 Jun 90
Turcot's syndrome or the
glioma
polyposis
syndrome is a rare variant of the
polyposis
syndrome and it is characterized by colonic
polyposis
and central nervous system neoplasm typically a glioblastoma or a medulloblastoma. We present a case of Turcot's syndrome in a child with malignant transformation.
...
PMID:A case of Turcot's Syndrome in a child with malignant transformation. 1159 Apr 58
Rare inherited syndromes that to some extent explain familial
glioma
include Turcot's syndrome, Li-Fraumeni syndrome and neurofibromatosis types I and II. The majority of families with
glioma
do not meet the clinical criteria for any of these syndromes. In order to study the genetic origin of familial
glioma
, tumour DNA (n = 35) or blood samples (n = 8) were collected from 25 families. The
glioma
tumours were tested for microsatellite instability (MSI) with two markers, BAT25 and BAT26, since
glioma
is associated with hereditary non-
polyposis
colon cancer (HNPCC) in Turcot's syndrome. Furthermore, p53 was screened from blood DNA (exons 2-11) with temporal temperature gradient electrophoresis (TTGE) since germline mutations in p53 are seen in Li-Fraumeni syndrome. In gliomas, there is a wide variety of somatic mutations, such as, for instance, in p53, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and p16. The tumour suppressor gene PTEN is also often somatically mutated in
glioma
, therefore it is attractive as a candidate gene for germline mutations in familial
glioma
. Blood DNA was directly sequenced for mutations in PTEN exons 1-9. The analysis showed that no mutations were found in either of the studied tumour suppressor genes, and no MSI-positive tumours were found. A common polymorphism in p53 at codon 72 (arginine/proline) was found in 6/8 of the patients. Apparently, mutation in the tested tumour suppressor genes or DNA mismatch repair genes does not explain the familial
glioma
observed in these families.
...
PMID:Microsatellite instability, PTEN and p53 germline mutations in glioma families. 1166 37
Benign congenital lesions resulting from the deficient regression of neuroglial tissue in normal embryonic development are called gliomas. They are usually located in the nasofrontal region and are diagnosed in the postnatal period. They are included in the differential diagnosis of nasofrontal midline masses. We present a case of the 9-year-old boy treated in the ENT Department of Wroclaw Medical University with the initial diagnosis of nasal
polyposis
or tumour which appeared to be
glioma
in the postoperative histological evaluation. The tumour was removed endoscopically. We present magnetic resonance imaging of the case together with the review of the literature concerning gliomas. We conclude that each doctor has to be aware of possible neoplasm even in the youngest groups of the patients.
...
PMID:[Nasal glioma--case report]. 1647 Dec
Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is an inherited condition causing numerous adenomatous colorectal polyps and a markedly elevated risk of colon cancer. FAP may be associated with various extracolonic manifestations such as desmoid fibromatosis and osteomas (termed Gardner's syndrome) and brain tumors, usually medulloblastoma or
glioma
[termed Brain Tumor
Polyposis
(BTP) syndrome type 2]. We describe a pediatric patient who initially presented with prolactinoma and later was found to have Gardner's syndrome. A germline mutation of the APC (adenomatous polyposis coli) gene was identified. Our case illustrates the association between prolactinoma and FAP, which may represent a rare subtype of Gardner's and BTP syndromes.
...
PMID:Prolactinoma as the first manifestation of Gardner's syndrome. 1686 50
Turcot's syndrome (
glioma
-
polyposis
) is a rare hereditary disorder characterized by association of colonic
polyposis
with primary tumors of the central nervous system. We report a case of a 27-year-old male diagnosed with Turcot's syndrome after an autopsy. The patient survived for more than two decades after his initial presentation with medulloblastoma at the age of five years. Such a long survival is exceptional in patients with this syndrome. Based on the genetic mutations, the patients with Turcot's syndrome are classified into adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) group or hereditary non-
polyposis
colon cancer (HNPCC) group. The article highlights the contrasting features of the two groups.
...
PMID:Turcot syndrome (glioma polyposis): a case report. 1900 36
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