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)

Paget's disease usually is found in patients past the age of 40. Early presenting symptoms include headache, deafness, tinnitus, and pain due to radicular compression. The diagnosis is confirmed by radiographic features and elevated levels of serum alkaline phosphatase and urinary hydroxyproline. Bony overgrowth results in pressure on nearby soft tissues such as the brain, spinal cord, and certain peripheral nerves. The abnormally soft quality of the calvarial bone permits distortion by the weight of the brain. Dorsal inclination of the plane of the foramen magnum and the projection of the odontoid process into the posterior fossa lead to stretching of the brain stem over the odontoid process and the ventral margin of the foramen. Obstructive hydrocephalus may result. Sarcoma of the crainial vault may develop in cases of Paget's disease. Once cervicomedullary or spinal compression has occurred, surgical decompression may be necessary. Three drugs--calcitonin, disodium etidronate, and mithramycin--have been used with some benefit in the treatment of Paget's disease.
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PMID:Paget's disease and the nervous system. 21 14

A 7-year-old boy, having had headache and vomiting for one month, was operated for a tumour in the left side of the posterior fossa. The tumour, weighing 52 g, infiltrated the dura mater, leptomeninges, and also, superficially, the left cerebellar hemisphere. The patient died five weeks after operation. Light and electron microscopical examination revealed a granulocytic sarcoma (chloroma). Pre- and postoperative blood examinations, together with postoperative and autopsy bone marrow examinations, showed no sign of acute myelogenous leukaemia. This is the second reported case of primary intracranial chloroma with no preceding sign of acute myelogenous leukemia, and the first case with cerebellar infiltration.
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PMID:Granulocytic sarcoma (chloroma) of the cerebellum and meninges a case report. 28 6

A rare case of a primary Ewing's sarcoma arising from the intracranial portion of the right orbital roof is presented. Clinical presentation was that of a rapidly growing tender exostosis, associated with headaches. History indicated that the tumor may have been present for more than 1 year. Skull x-rays showed marked diastasis of the coronal suture and a "mottled" appearance on the right frontal bone suggestive of a sarcoma. Bone scan further confirmed the presence of a malignant bone tumor. Computerized tomography scan showed the intracranial extension of the tumor and a follow-up scan allowed us to see the response of the tumor to therapy. Only two other cases with details as to intracranial localization were found in the literature.
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PMID:Localized primary intracranial Ewing's sarcoma of the orbital roof. Case report. 43 85

37 cases of cerebral hemispheric tumours are presented. These make up 23,1% of all the intracranial tumours observed over a period of 11 years in a Child Neurology Service. 19 cases were males and 18 females. Their ages were between 16 days and 7 1/2 years. Vomiting and headache were usually the first symptoms followed by seizures, frequently of the focal kind. Motor difficulties used to appear later. 69.6% of the cases presented a malfunctioning focus on the E.E.G. on the side of the tumor. The simple cranial X-Rays showed firstly widening of the fronto-parietal sutures, intracranial calcifications were seen in some of the cases with ependymonas and piloid astrocytoma in patients with Bourneville's disease. Pneumoencephalography as well as carotid angiography, radioisotope examination and computerized tomography gave us very positive results in the localization and determination of the size of the tumor. The ependymomas showed pathological vascularization regularly. The nature of the tumours corresponded to: 14 cases of ependymoma, 8 cases of astrocytoma I and II types, 1 case of astrocytoma of types III and IV, 3 cases of plexus papilloma, 2 cases of meningioma, 1 case of sarcoma of the basal ganglia, 1 case of teratoma, 3 cases of indifferentiated malignant tumours, 4 cases not proven. There was a 20% survival of patients five years later.
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PMID:[Cerebral tumours in infancy (author's transl)]. 90 Jun 62

Two cases of primary intracerebral malignant lymphoma were reported. Case 1 was a 42-year-old man who had been suffering from headache and mental disturbances for about 3 months prior to admission. These complaints progressed insidiously. He was admitted to our hospital on March 31, 1973. On neurological examinations he was in somnolence state and had neck rigidity, positive of Kernig's sign, disorientation and dyscalculia. Lumbar puncture gave a C.S.F. pressure of 240 mmH2O and the fluid contained 180 mg/dl of protein. A left vertebral angiogram via brachial artery demonstrated thalamic and cerebellar mass lesions. For the development of symptoms of increased intracranial pressure, a ventriculoperitoneal shunt operation was performed on April 7. A right carotid angiogram after ventriculoperitoneal shunt operation disclosed a frontal mass lesion. On May 2, a right frontal craniotomy was carried out and the frontal lobe was removed together with the tumors. After the operation his consciousness remained stupor. Thereafter consciousness and clinical pictures gradually worsened, and he died on May 30. Autopsy was performed, and gross examinations revealed tumors in the bilateral frontal and temporal lobes, right parietal lobe, and left cerebellar hemisphere. On coronal sections, there were neoplastic proliferation extending from the right thalamus to the putamen and a tumor in the right midbrain. No evidence of neoplastic proliferation was found outside the central nervous system. Microscopic examinations showed a diffuse proliferation of tumor cells with mitosis and polymorphism. The tumor was consisted of small lymphoid cells. Reticulin fibers were not found in the tumor with Watanabe's silver method. It was also unable to impregnate the tumor cells with silver carbonate. This case may be classified the primary interacerebral lymphosarcoma. Case 2 was a 48-year-old man, who was admitted to the hospital complaining of occipitalgia, speech disturbances and diffculty in walking. On neurological examinations, he had a right spastic hemiparesis and dyscalculia. A right carotid angiogram showed the frontal mass lesion. On April 18, a left frontal craniotomy was performed and frontal lobe was removed with the tumor. He made a good recovery from the operation and remained well for about 1 month. However, it culminated in a gradual diminution in the level of consciousness. Unfortunately, he died on June 20. No autopsy was performed. Histologically, the tumor cells had round or ovoid nuclei, mitosis and polymorphism. The perivascular arrangement of the tumor tissue showed tendency to confluence. There were reticulin fibers in the tumor tissue, particularly around the blood vessels. Microglial cells were not impregated with silver carbonate. It is supposed that this case belongs to the primary intracerebral "reticulum cells sarcoma-microglioma" described by Rubinstein or reticulum cell sarcoma. Both the case 1 and the case 2 should be filed to be malignant lymphoma in the wide category.
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PMID:[Two cases of primary intracerebral malignant lymphoma (author's transl)]. 110 27

Granulocytic sarcoma of the parenchyma of the brain present in a patient with acute monocytic leukemia, and its unusual course during treatment, is described. Four years after diagnosis of acute monocytic leukemia, a 24-year-old man developed severe headache during its remission period. The CT scan showed large intraparencymal mass in the right frontal lobe, which was partially removed and diagnosed as granulocytic sarcoma. Following the operation, radiation in total dose of 35.5 Gy was given to the whole brain, and there was also left intraventricular administration of methotrexate (MTX) and cytosine arabinoside (ara-C). The treatment resulted in the complete disappearance of the intraparenchymal mass apart from small calcifications. Five months later, the patient redeveloped severe headache with consciousness disturbance. CT scan revealed marked swelling in the left cerebral hemisphere with irregular contrast-enhanced areas. The patient died of brain herniation in spite of conservative therapy. Photomicroscopic findings of the left cerebral hemisphere proved the presence of "disseminated leukoencephalopathy" and the absence of tumor cells. On the other hand, the right frontal lesion consisted of no tumor cells but scar tissues. This unusual feature of the CT scan in the terminal stage might be caused by combination with the effect of highly concentrated MTX in the left cerebral hemisphere because of the increased permeability of the ependym and the relatively high radiosensitivity in the non-affected left cerebral hemisphere.
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PMID:[Intraparenchymal granulocytic sarcoma in acute monocytic leukemia; case report]. 160 77

The Authors report a case of primary cerebral lymphoma occurred in a 62 years old lady, who came to observation for headache and mood alterations. An enhanced CT showed a lesion recalling a meningeal sarcoma. Points of interest in this case are the unusual radiological appearance and the infrequent localization. Main anatomical and clinical characteristics of primary CNS non-Hodgkin lymphomas are recalled, even with regard to modern immunohistochemical techniques.
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PMID:Unusual radiological presentation of a primary CNS lymphoma. 261 97

Twenty patients with supratentorial, intracerebral lesions defined by computed tomographic scan or magnetic resonance imaging were treated by surgery and adoptive immunotherapy with lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and recombinant Interleukin-2 (rIL-2, Cetus). Seventeen patients had glioblastoma, two had high-grade oligodendroglioma, and one patient had two metastatic sarcoma lesions. LAK cells were produced from blood mononuclear cells (MNC) obtained by 2 to 3 leukapheresis procedures and cultured (2.5 x 10(6) MNC/ml) 3 to 5 days with 1000 units rIL-2/ml. Although LAK cells could be produced from MNC of all patients, those taking steroids or with a low Karnofsky functional status generated, on average, suboptimal LAK cell activity. Age, sex, and serum anticonvulsant levels do not seem to influence a patient's ability to produce LAK cells in vitro. For therapy, cultured MNC (1-15 x 10(9] containing LAK cells were suspended in saline containing 10(6) units rIL-2 and injected into tissue surrounding the tumor cavity during craniotomy. For 3 days after their operations, patients received 10(6) units rIL-2 into the tumor cavity through an Ommaya reservoir. The treatment protocol was tolerated well by all patients, although they all experienced some degree of headache, fever, or lethargy that cleared within a few days of the last rIL-2 injection. When computed tomographic (CT) scans were obtained soon after treatment, areas of low density suggested a greater-than-normal extent of edema around the operative site. At the present time, CT scans indicate that the tumors of seven patients have recurred with an average disease-free interval of 25 +/- 6 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Intralesional infusion of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) for the treatment of patients with malignant brain tumor. 285 Nov 16

Chloroma is a granulocytic sarcoma with it's characteristic greenish color. Recently there is an increased number of cases that are apparently aleukemic when the tumor mass is first presented. Recently we experienced a case of granulocytic sarcoma with characteristic green color (chloroma), which showed no evidence of leukemia in the bone marrow and peripheral blood. This patient presented headache, and was diagnosed brain tumor on computed tomography. A left parietal cranietomy was done to remove a large central dome-like mass, 8 cm, involving the dura with a slightly dusky greenish solid appearance. Compact nests of moderately mature granulocytes and immature cells comprised the tumor. Histochemical and electron microscopic studies confirmed these tumor cells as myeloid cells in varying stages of maturation. Several days after the operation, left cervical lymph nodes became palpated, and the biopsied lymph nodes revealed same neoplastic cells seen in the skull. However, bone marrow aspiration, biopsy and peripheral blood smears did not show any evidence of leukemia.
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PMID:Intracranial granulocytic sarcoma (chloroma) in a nonleukemic patient. 326 73

Primary sarcoma in the central nervous system is rare. From 1954 to 1986, 1417 neoplasms of the central nervous system were treated in our hospital and only one case of primary leiomyosarcoma of the pineal gland was seen. The patient, a forty-seven year old man, had diplopia for 2 months, headache and ataxia for 2 weeks before admission. The CT scan showed a space occupying lesion in the pineal gland. During operation, a mass, 3 x 2.5 x 2 cm in size, was found in the pineal and subtotal resection was performed. The pathological diagnosis of primary leiomyosarcoma of the pineal gland was established. The patient died the next year of the operation. Finally, the histogenesis, clinical manifestations, diagnosis and differential diagnosis are discussed with a review of literature.
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PMID:[Primary leiomyosarcoma of the pineal gland--a case report]. 345 45


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