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

The nitrosourea-induced rat glioma clone RG2 was tested for its capacity to form multicellular tumor spheroids (MTS's). Resulting spheroids were investigated by light and electron microscopy with regard to their proliferation patterns and morphological features. Using microsurgical techniques and avoiding mechanical injury of the brain tissue, the authors successfully transplanted avascular MTS's under the dura of the cerebellum, above the vermis, in 43 adult syngeneic Fischer CD rats. The rate of tumor establishment was 93%, and the tumors that were solid and spheroid in shape grew exponentially. Neovascularization could be observed at 3 days after implantation, and invasion of the cerebellum occurred by 3 to 5 days. Neurological deterioration, including ataxia, impairment of walking, and apathy, could be observed after 10 days. The mean survival time was approximately 16 days. The subdural cerebellar tumors were studied by histological techniques, and two morphometric methods were applied to check the growth of implanted spheroids. All tumors were deeply stained with the Evans blue dye-albumin complex, demonstrating disturbance of the blood-brain barrier. The easy accessibility of the cerebellar vermis in rats, the microsurgical implantation of glioma spheroids under the dura avoiding nerve tissue disruption, and the high percentage of reproducible establishment of tumors favor this experimental brain-tumor model. This should be an excellent model for study of experimental therapies.
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PMID:RG2 glioma growth in rat cerebellum after subdural implantation. 242 62

The presenting symptomatology in a case of fronto-callosal glioma were affective indifference, severe disorders of attention and dynamic aphasia with marked reduction in spoken expression. Spontaneous and induced writing were abundant and incoercible. Their meticulous production and formal correction contrasted with its semantic incoherence. This behavior is comparable with that of the compulsive activity that may result from pallidal lesions or bilateral frontal lesions. The term graphomania is proposed to distinguish this behavior from echographia and hypergraphism.
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PMID:[Graphomania. Compulsive graphic activity as a manifestation of fronto-callosal glioma]. 336 90

Radiotherapy (RT) of the brain is associated with significant stigma in the neuro-oncology community. This is primarily because of the potentially severe complications with which it may be associated. These complications, especially in subacute and latent settings, are often unpredictable, potentially progressive, and irreversible. The onset of complications may start from the first fraction of 2 Gy, continuing over several months after end of RT with persistent drowsiness and apathy. It may also extend over many years with progressive onset of neurocognitive impairments such as memory decline, and diminished focus/attention. For long-term survivors, such as young patients irradiated for a favorable low-grade glioma, quality of life can be seriously impacted by RT. It is essential, as in the pediatric field, to propose patient-specific regimens from the very outset of therapy. The use of molecular biomarkers to better predict survival, control of comorbidities along with judicious use of medications such as steroids and antiepileptics, improved targeting with the help of modern imaging and RT techniques, modulation of the dose, and fractionation aimed at limiting integral dose to the healthy brain all have the potential to minimize treatment-related complications while maintaining the therapeutic efficacy for which RT is known. Sparing "radiosensitive" areas such as hippocampi could have a modest but measurable impact with regard to cognitive preservation, an effect that can possibly be enhanced when used in conjunction with memantine and/or donepezil.
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PMID:Complications from radiotherapy. 2694 57