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)

We present a very rare case of 7 year-old-girl who had a pontine glioma with supratentorial meningeal involvement. She complained severe headache with meningeal irritation. She showed fluctuating cranial nerve impairment of the both abducens and glosopharyngeal nerves but no signs of weakness or facial paresis. She also reported two episodes of generalized convulsion with unconsciousness during admission. MRI disclosed a hypointensity intrinsic brainstem mass with an enhancing exophytic component in the prepontine cistern and a sharp contrast uptake is disclosed in the left-meninges of the supratentrial structures. An open biopsy was performed and diagnosed as a high grade astrocytoma.
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PMID:[Brainstem glioma with supratentorial meningeal dissemination--a case report]. 128 96

With imaging-based volumetric stereotactic techniques, it is possible to selectively and accurately remove any CT- or MRI-defined part or all of any intra-axial neoplasm. However, glial neoplasms are composed of two elements: tumor tissue and isolated tumor cells which infiltrate brain parenchyma. In high-grade gliomas and pilocytic astrocytomas, the tumor tissue component is most accurately defined by the volume of contrast enhancement. Tumor tissue in low-grade nonpilocytic gliomas is indistinguishable on imaging from infiltrated parenchyma. Stereotactic biopsy is presently the only method by which CT hypodense tumor tissue can be differentiated from infiltrated parenchyma, which is also hypodense. In eloquent brain areas, stereotactic resection is appropriate for the tumor tissue component only in patients harboring glial tumors.
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PMID:Stereotactic resection and its limitations in glial neoplasms. 129 51

Two cases of bilateral thalamic glioma in a 70 year-old man and a 8 year-old boy, documented by MRI and pathological data are reported. Such tumors are rare. Early symptoms may be misleading, with intellectual impairment or psychiatric disorders together with a normal CT scan. MRI and pathological findings support the view that bilateral thalamic gliomas represent a particular clinico-pathological entity among thalamic tumors.
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PMID:[Bilateral thalamic glioma. A clinicopathological study of 2 cases]. 130 67

A 35-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with a 3 month history of progressive paraparesis and impairment of bowel and bladder function. MRI suggested a malignant glioma at the level of T9 to L1. Laminectomy and subtotal removal of the tumor was performed. The surgical specimen was a glioblastoma multiforme. An aggressive adjuvant therapy was scheduled to prevent rapid local regrowth and leptomeningeal dissemination. Radiotherapy with a total dose of 65Gy was delivered with chemotherapy including ACNU (2mg/kg) and vincristine (0.2mg/kg). Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells were given intrathecally with a total dose of 1.6 x 10(9) LAK cells with 3 x 10(4) units of IL-2. MRI taken 6 months after surgery revealed no residual tumor, and no malignant cell was detected in the patient's CSF. After physiotherapy, she became able to walk with a stick and was discharged. Chemotherapy (ACNU 2mg/kg/8 weeks) had been further continued for 2 years. She did well until 14 months after surgery, when paraparesis recurred and rapidly progressed to completism. MRI revealed a spinal cord swelling with marked edema, suggesting delayed radiation necrosis. Two years after surgery, MRI showed a marked atrophy of the spinal cord, and no residual tumor. But 3 years after surgery, a round tumor at the level of T11 and T12 was revealed on MRI, and she was admitted to our hospital again. A spinal cord amputation was performed, and the tumor was totally removed without worsening her neurological symptoms. Surgical specimen of the tumor was glioblastoma multiforme again.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of spinal cord glioblastoma multiforme]. 131 Aug 3

Verbal recent memory disturbance was observed in a patient with a malignant glioma associated with left hippocampal atrophy. A 25 year-old male was admitted because of seizures. CT scan and MRI showed enhanced mass lesions in the left temporal lobe associated with ipsilateral hippocampal atrophy. Neurological examination disclosed right homonymous hemianopsia, word amnesia, alexia, agraphia and acalculia. Neuropsychological examination disclosed verbal recent memory disturbance, which consisted of impaired recall of the precisely memorized words after some interruption. Although hippocampal lesions are known to be often associated with cerebrovascular disease, hippocampal atrophy due to brain tumor is quite unusual. This case suggested that the left hippocampus is closely related to verbal recent memory. Hippocampal atrophy in this case conceivably derived from the decreased arterial flow due to perifocal edema or obstructive hydrocephalus.
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PMID:[A case of malignant glioma associated with verbal recent memory disturbance due to left hippocampal atrophy; case report]. 138 Jun 76

The consultants agreed that the differential diagnosis should focus on congenital masses, including an encephalocele, glioma, dermoid, hamartoma, hemangioma, rhabdomyosarcoma, neurofibroma, and nasolacrimal duct cyst. There was some disagreement as to which is the best way to evaluate the mass, ranging from an MRI (Dr. Reilly), to CT scan (Dr. Cotton), to both MRI and CT (Dr. Koopman). Blood tests to evaluate pituitary function could be indicated if there was a sphenoid defect (Dr. Reilly). None of the experts would biopsy this lesion. All would proceed with a definitive resection. One surgeon would defer surgery for several months and then perform the resection via a biocoronal craniotomy (Dr. Reilly). A combined anterior craniotomy and external ethmoidectomy would be planned by another (Dr. Koopman). The third consultant would combine an anterior craniotomy with a mid-face degloving, external rhinoplasty, or lateral rhinotomy approach (Dr. Cotton). Routine perioperative antibiotics would only be used by two of the surgeons (Drs. Reilly and Koopman). If a CSF leak were encountered there are several options. A small lesion could be allowed to close on its own (Dr. Reilly). If the leak occurred while the bicoronal incision was still open or if the leak were large, it could be repaired from above (Drs. Reilly and Koopman). One surgeon would proceed with a repair from above even if the leak were encountered during the intranasal approach (Dr. Cotton). Only one surgeon would restrict postoperative activity with intubation and sedation or paralysis (Dr. Koopman). Regarding follow-up, no one was concerned about the final pathology report.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Nasal mass in a pediatric patient. 139 78

Sequential MR imaging with gadolinium-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA) and sequential measurements of plasma Gd-DTPA concentration by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) were used to estimate the blood-to-tissue transport coefficient (Ki) in the 36B-10 rat glioma model. For these measurements, tissue Gd-DTPA concentration was estimated from tumor enhancement by correlation with calibration measurements obtained by ICP-AES analysis of tumor tissue. The 14 animals for which Ki was calculated can be grouped into those imaged at 11 days following tumor implantation, at 13-18 days, and at 20 days. The mean (+SEM) Ki values for these groups were 1.1 + 0.24, 9.2 + 0.8, and 13.4 + 1.7 ml/kg-min, respectively. These results correspond well with published data obtained by quantitative autoradiography. It is concluded that frequent sequential imaging and a graphical approach to Ki calculation are promising methods for determining the blood-to-tissue transport coefficient noninvasively by contrast-enhanced MRI.
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PMID:Measurement of blood-brain barrier permeability in a tumor model using magnetic resonance imaging with gadolinium-DTPA. 143 11

This paper reports clinicopathological findings concerning an enlarged bulky cyst and the tumor cavity following local administration of an anticancer agent combined with radiotherapy in two patients suffering from malignant glioma. Case 1: This 69 year-old man who had been diagnosed as having glioblastoma in the right parietal lobe had received local chemotherapy after the first operation. Simultaneously radiotherapy of 69 Gy in total dose was performed. At the second operation for the tumor, cyst formation was clinically confirmed and necrotomy as well as evacuation of the large cyst was performed after adjuvant therapy. The patient died at a time ten months after the first surgical operation. Case 2: This is the case of a 48 year-old man who was diagnosed as having gemistocytic astrocytoma in the left frontal lobe. The first surgical operation was performed and was followed by local chemotherapy as well as radiotherapy (total dose of 90 Gy in two sessions). The second surgical operation of the recurrent tumor, with necrotomy and evacuation of the large cyst were performed after adjuvant therapy. The patient expired at a time sixty-five months after the first surgical operation. Relevant to the chemotherapy, adriamycin (ADM) (0.5mg) and methotrexate (MTX) (1mg) were administered through the Ommaya's reservoir into the tumor bed at craniotomy. The usual doses of ADM and MTX amounted to 5.0mg respectively. Through conventional CT and MRI, formation of a cyst including abundant membranous debris or septi was identified in both cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Cyst formation following local chemotherapy of malignant brain tumor: a clinicopathological study of two cases]. 144 92

A case of cystic optic glioma involving chiasma and bilateral posterior optic pathway was reported. A 26-year-old male was admitted to our hospital complaining of dysarthria and left hemiparesis. CT, MRI revealed a cystic tumor at the right basal ganglia to midbrain, a calcified one at the bilateral optic tract and left temporal to thalamic region, and a small one at the chiasma. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy were performed because anaplastic astrocytoma was suspected after stereotactic biopsy of the tumor at the right basal ganglia. The subsequent MRI showed continuity among the above three lesions to be well defined. About 2 years later, however, enlargement of the cyst, tumor invasion beyond the optic pathway and growth of the chiasmal lesion were noted, and direct surgery to the chiasmal lesion was performed. The chiasma was swollen and grayish soft tumor tissue was partly resected after aspiration of the intrachiasmal cyst. The definitive pathological diagnosis was pilocytic astrocytoma. This case was designated as a peculiar optic glioma in the following respects; the patient was an adult man suffering from dysarthria and left hemiparesis, the tumor involved not only the chiasma and the bilateral optic tract, but also the outside optic pathway and was accompanied by a large cyst.
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PMID:[A case of cystic optic glioma involving chiasma and bilateral posterior optic pathway]. 144 96

Nine patients with a recurrent malignant glioma were treated with repeated intracavitary or intracerebroventricular injections of human recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) alone or in combination with systemic interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha). Five patients received only rIL-2 and four were treated with rIL-2 plus subcutaneous injections of IFN-alpha. Therapy was administered on a Monday, Wednesday, Friday schedule for up to 10 weeks, beginning with a dose of 10,000 IU rIL-2/injection. Doses were escalated every two weeks until some toxicity was apparent. The maximum amount of rIL-2 any one patient in this group received was 580,000 IU. Patients on combination immunotherapy were held at an rIL-2 dosage of 10,000 IU while IFN-alpha, which began at 3 million IU, was escalated every other week up to 18 million IU/dose. They were then held at that IFN-alpha dosage and rIL-2 was increased to 50,000 IU. The total amount of rIL-2 and IFN-alpha any one in this group received was 510,000 IU and 417 million IU, respectively. Repeated injections of 10,000 IU rIL-2 were well-tolerated by all nine patients and no change in their functional status was seen. At doses at 50,000 IU rIL-2, increased edema around the tumor cavity was observed by MRI/CT scand in 3/5 patients and clinical side-effects in the form of somnolence and headache along with some morbidity specifically associated with tumor location were also seen. Patients receiving rIL-2+ IFN-alpha showed progressive fatigue, muscle weakness, and occasionally nausea. Two of these patients showed increased peritumoral edema on MRI/CT scan.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Treatment of recurrent malignant glioma by repeated intracerebral injections of human recombinant interleukin-2 alone or in combination with systemic interferon-alpha. Results of a phase I clinical trial. 154 81


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