Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 16-year-old female presented to an emergency department with complaints of nausea and vomiting, dehydration, increasing weakness, and resting tremor. The past history included mild exercise-induced asthma. She denied sexual activity, but a urine test for beta-human chorionic gonadotropin was positive and she was transferred to a gynecology service for management of pregnancy. She also had primary amenorrhea and delayed growth for age. Further complaints included headaches accompanied with worsening of visual activity. Pelvic ultrasound revealed no intrauterine or ectopic pregnancy. Head CT scan showed a suprasellar tumor, better defined on an MRI as a hypothalamic tumor. Pathology following partial tumor resection revealed a mixed germ cell tumor with negative metastatic work-up.
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PMID:Another Positive Pregnancy Test. 1035 84

A 17-year-old male patient was brought to our clinic because of sudden onset of headache, vomiting, followed by transient loss of consciousness during a strenuous exercise. Neurologic examinations revealed that the patient had severe sensorimotor and brain stem dysfunction. Examinations of cranial CT and MR imaging showed a huge heterogeneously enhanced tumor originated from the pineal region with tumoral hemorrhage. The tumor markers were found to be high in AFP but not the beta-HCG and CEA. A clinical diagnosis highly suggestive of germ cell tumor was made. Prior to the planned emergency radiation therapy, he received an external ventricular drainage (EVD) and open biopsy of the tumor. Due to a postoperative complication of cerebellar hemorrhage observed 8 hours later, another maneuver was therefore required to extirpate the pineal tumor and cerebellar hematoma. The histological diagnosis proved to be a mixed germ cell tumor with tumoral hemorrhage. Spontaneous intratumoral hemorrhage in germ cell tumor of the pineal region is rare, probably due to compromised venous circulation within the tumor. The bleeding propensity, which may contribute to the formation of cerebellar hematoma, warrants a special attention when a biopsy procedure is to be performed.
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PMID:Mixed germ cell tumor presenting as intratumoral hemorrhage: report of a case originated from the pineal region. 1051 67

We report a case of a dermoid cyst in the parasellar area associated with porencephaly. A 22-year-old man presented with headache and visual disturbance. Non-enhanced brain CT showed a high density mass in the parasellar area and a low density area in the left temporal lobe. On gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted images, a partial rim enhancement was present in the parasellar region. A presumptive diagnosis of Rathke cleft cyst, craniopharyngioma, non-function pituitary adenoma, or germ cell tumor was considered. A left frontotemporal craniotomy was performed and the tumor was removed almost totally. The tumor was well-capsulated and contained whitish, milky debris. The histologic diagnosis was dermoid cyst. The temporal lobe lesion was porencephaly. The postoperative course was uneventful. Their most typical aspect is the presence of a low-density mass on CT, allowing an easy radiologic diagnosis of dermoid cyst containing lipids. Enhancement following contrast administration is uncommon. The hyperdensity may be related to the high protein content of the lesion. The hyperdense aspect of the lesion on CT, and the presence of rim enhancement made the radiologic diagnosis of a dermoid cyst difficult in this case. A case of dermoid cyst associated with porencephaly has not yet been reported in the literature.
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PMID:[Atypical presentation of a dermoid cyst with porencephaly]. 1465 94

Intracranial germinomas arising primarily in the midbrain are extremely rare and only one case has been reported in the literature. A 15-year-old boy presented with headache, diplopia, unsteadiness and personality changes. Brain MRI showed a heterogeneous lesion in the midbrain. The pineal body region was free. The preoperative diagnosis included brain-stem glioma, metastasis and lymphoma. Stereotactic biopsy was permitted in order to take a specimen and the diagnosis of germinoma was established. The patient responded well to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Germinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of midbrain lesions. Preoperative diagnosis is difficult and biopsy is still needed for such lesions.
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PMID:Primary midbrain germinoma. 1532 41

In this report we describe a case of late relapse non-seminomatous germ cell tumor eradicated after 9 years of initial onset. A 20-year-old man complaining of recent aches, vomiting and headaches was diagnosed with right testicular tumor with solitary brain and bilateral lung metastases. At presentation, human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) was elevated to 22,000 mIU/ml, and alpha-fetoprotein to 79 ng/ml. A right high orchiectomy was performed, followed by a right occipital osteoplastic craniotomy due to the presence of left hemiplesia and anisocoria prior to chemotherapy. Pathologically, the tumors were embryonal carcinoma and yolk sac tumor. The patient received 5 cycles of cisplatin-based PEP chemotherapy (cisplatin, etoposide and peplomycin) after which all the tumor markers fell to within the normal range. The remaining right lung tumor was removed surgically and the remnant lesion was found to be scar tissue. Four years after initial therapy, elevated serum HCG levels were detected. The tumor metastasis showed only HCG elevation responsive to chemotherapy each time followed by relapse and undetectable with all kinds of imaging examinations for 5 years. Finally when the tumor became chemorefractory, conventional computed tomography scan on bone window detected the occult tumor in L4 corporal body. After radiation therapy the tumor was removed by total spondylectomy and there was no viable tumor cells in the specimen pathologically. HCG fell to within normal range according to its half life period after the operation and there is no relapse of HCG after 18 months follow up. CT bone window photography may be sometimes useful to detect occult bone metastasis and salvage surgery combined with radiation therapy may be worth trying in patients with chemorefractory non-seminomatous germ cell tumors.
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PMID:[Occult lumbar vertebral body metastasis of non-seminomatous germ cell tumor eradicated by radiation and salvage surgery 9 years after initial onset]. 1756 7

Extragonadal germ cell tumors are uncommon and such tumors originating from the lung parenchyma are extremely rare. This is a case of 68-year-old female who was admitted with complaints of right-sided weakness, inability to maintain her balance, right-sided headache, and bloody sputum. Her workup revealed two enhancing brain lesions and large lung mass involving the left lower lobe. Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of the lung followed by craniotomy was performed and the patient was initially diagnosed with lung adenocarcinoma metastatic to the brain based on the cytomorphology of the lung FNA and histology of the brain mass. However, retrospective investigation revealed markedly elevated alpha fetoprotein (AFP) of which the cytopathologist was unaware at the time of diagnosis. A review of the cytology and surgical specimen slides, as well as immunohistochemistry (IHC) on the brain tumor and FNA cell block were preformed. On the basis of the slides review, clinical findings, and immunostaining results, a diagnosis of primary pulmonary mixed germ cell tumor, containing choriocarcinoma and yolk sac elements, with brain metastases, was retrospectively made.
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PMID:Aspiration biopsy cytomorphology of primary pulmonary germ cell tumor metastatic to the brain. 1937 16

The nongerminomatous germ cell tumor occurring in the fourth ventricle is extremely rare. A 9-year-old boy presented with symptoms of obvious headache, projectile vomiting, diplopia and motor weakness. MRI scanning revealed lesions occupying the fourth ventricle, with dual-lateral ventricle expansion after gadolinium administration. Suboccipital craniectomy was performed and the tumor was removed by block resection. Twice intraoperative biopsy specimens revealed fiber vascular tissue and hemangioma. Histological examination revealed that the tumor consisted of loose network structures and Schiller-Duval bodies. Immunohistochemical study showed that the primitive germ cells were positive for placental alkaline phosphatase, alpha-fetoprotein, cytokeratin, vimentin, but negative for glial fibrillary acidic protein. The histological diagnosis was pure yolk sac tumor. Two years after surgery, he has suffered no tumor recurrence. A combination of surgical treatment, radiation and chemotherapy is mandatory.
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PMID:Yolk sac tumor in the fourth ventricle: a case report. 1954 38

A 13-year-old girl presented with an exceedingly rare case of primary yolk sac tumor located within the lateral ventricle, manifesting as headache, nausea, and diplopia. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 4-cm-diameter solid enhanced mass within the left inferior horn of the lateral ventricle. The tumor was removed subtotally via left middle temporal corticotomy. The histological and immunohistochemical diagnosis was pure yolk sac tumor. The serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) level was elevated at 1957.2 ng/ml and the serum beta-human chorionic gonadotropin level was 4 mIU/ml after surgery. The patient underwent radiotherapy (whole brain, 30 Gy; tumor bed, 21 Gy; whole spinal axis, 30 Gy) and chemotherapy (ifosfamide, cisplatin, etoposide). After three treatment cycles, the serum AFP level had decreased to 4.5 ng/ml. However, the tumor recurred with cerebrospinal fluid dissemination after nine cycles of chemotherapy. She died 18 months after surgery. The possibility of germ cell tumor should be considered in pediatric patients with brain tumors occurring outside the pineal or suprasellar region.
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PMID:Primary yolk sac tumor within the lateral ventricle. 1994 Apr 3

Basaloid squamous cell carcinoma (BSCC) is a distinctive variant of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) with more aggressive behavior. It occurs preferentially in the upper aerodigestive tract. Sinonasal tract BSCC is uncommon, and only limited studies have been reported in literature. In these studies, most BSCCs arose from the nasal mucosa with or without extension to the paranasal sinuses. Rare reported cases of BSCC involved only the paranasal sinus. In this report, we present a case of a female patient with a sphenoid sinus mass. Clinically, the patient had progressively decreasing vision and headache. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computerized tomographic (CT) scan showed an infiltrating tumor mass involving the sphenoid sinus and the sella with compression of the optic nerve. Pathologic examination revealed an invasive basaloid epithelial neoplasm that was arranged in lobules, nests and cords. The tumor also showed palisading of peripheral cells, focal abrupt squamous differentiation and in situ carcinoma in the surface mucosa. In the immunohistochemical studies, this tumor revealed a strongly positive nuclear staining for p63. The morphologic and ancillary studies indicated a BSCC. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of sinonasal tract BSCC that mainly involved the sphenoid bone and sella. In this region, BSCC should be distinguished from benign and malignant neoplasms that more often affect sella and base of skull, such as pituitary adenoma with extensive necrosis, small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNC), olfactory neuroblastoma, malignant germ cell tumor, paranasal adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC), and a variety of metastatic malignancies.
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PMID:Sphenoid sinus basaloid squamous cell carcinoma presenting as a sellar mass: report a case with review of the literature. 2097 44

We report on two patients with cerebral sinus venous thrombosis following chemotherapy with cisplatin, bleomycin and etoposide for non-seminomatous germ cell tumor. Headache and neurological deficits were the leading symptoms. Cancer and cisplatin chemotherapy are well-known risk factors for thromboembolic events. The therapeutic strategy is an anticoagulant therapy. Symptoms are usually reversible within weeks under this therapy. Therefore, in patients with testicular cancer and chemotherapy who present with neurological symptoms, cerebral sinus venous thrombosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Two cases of cerebral sinus venous thrombosis following chemotherapy for non-seminomatous germ cell tumor. 2222 Jan 49


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