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)

We report a man in whom a 15 cm. renal tumor was excised at the age of 49. The pathological examination showed a clear cell carcinoma. Five years later, he presented with headache, vomiting and unilateral palpebral ptosis. Imaging studies showed a sellar tumor with pituitary apoplexy. The tumor was excised and the pathological study disclosed a clear cell tumor, positive for vimentin, cytokeratins AE1 and AE3 and immunohistochemically negative for LH, TSH, ACTH and GH. Considering the similar histopathological features, it was considered as a metastasis of the renal tumor. The patient was supplemented with thyroid, adrenal and gonadal hormones. Seven years later, he presented a new tumor in the remaining kidney, that corresponded to a cystic papillary renal cell carcinoma. Afterwards, he presented a transitional urinary bladder tumor. Mortality associated to renal cell tumors is 90% at 5 years, and pituitary metastases are extraordinarily uncommon.
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PMID:[Apoplexy in pituitary metastasis of renal cell carcinoma. Clinical case followed for 7 years]. 1134 89

A 43-year-old woman who had undergone breast cancer surgery 1 year previously complained of headache and nausea. Her brain computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a well-circumscribed, heterogeneously enhanced tumor in the right thalamus. She underwent gross total resection of the tumor followed by radiochemotherapy, and her clinical course was uneventful after surgery. Histological examination revealed a moderate number of tumor cells with fine bipolar processes in a mucoid matrix, which suggested pilocytic astrocytoma. The tumor was associated with microvascular proliferation but did not show significant mitosis or necrosis. In some areas, it had an epithelioid appearance, with ribbon-like, cribriform, and pseudoglandular patterns involving cuboid-shaped cells showing nuclear atypia and mitotic figures. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and vimentin in the area resembling pilocytic astrocytoma, but in the epithelioid area they were negative for GFAP and vimentin as well as for breast cancer markers, including AE1/AE3. The proliferating potential, represented by the MIB-1 labeling index, was high (82.5%) in the area of epithelioid appearance, compared to only 3% in the area of pilocytic astrocytoma-like appearance. As a rare histoarchitectural variant of glioblastoma, the epithelioid pattern may represent a very primitive tumor cell phenotype. Typically, this pattern is characterized by well-circumscribed masses, although its clinical significance is unknown.
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PMID:Epithelioid glioblastoma: a case report. 1809

Spindle cell oncocytoma (SCO) of the pituitary gland is a relatively recently established, very rare subtype of adenohypophysis tumours that was introduced as a distinct clinicopathological entity in the fourth edition of WHO classification of the central nervous system tumours (2007). It is non-endocrine neoplasm of the anterior pituitary that occurs in adults and usually follows a benign clinical course, corresponding to WHO grade I. Up to now, pituitary SCO have been reported occasionally and only 14 cases of SCO have been documented in the literature. Because of their rarity, the pathogenesis and natural history of these tumours have not been fully characterized. We report two additional cases of SCO occurring in females aged 63 years (Case 1) and 65 years (Case 2), who presented with pan-hypopituitarism, headache and visual field defect. In both cases, the magnetic resonance imaging showed solid sellar mass of moderate size with suprasellar extension. The clinical and radiological features suggested non-functioning pituitary macroadenomas without evidence of invasive growth. One patient presented with tumour recurrence 3 years after undergoing the previous surgical removal of tumour, which was initially misdiagnosed as schwannoma. The first tumour was removed by transsphenoidal surgery and the second one by frontal craniotomy. Histologically and immunohistochemically, both tumours displayed the features typical for SCO of the pituitary. They were composed of interwoven fascicles of spindle cells exhibiting abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm of oncocytic or granular appearance. Mitoses were rarely observed and necrosis was absent. In one case, the advanced lymphocytic infliltration was observed within neoplastic tissue. The tumour cells exhibited immunoreactivity for S-100 protein, galectin-3, vimentin and epithelial membrane antigen but they were negative for GFAP, anterior pituitary neuroendocrine markers (prolactin, growth hormone, TSH, ACTH, FSH, LH), chromogranin, synaptophysin, cytokeratin CK (AE1/AE3), smooth muscle actin, desmin, CD34 and CD68. MIB1 labeling index did not exceed 10%. Ultrastructurally, the tumour cells were rich in mitochondria with lamellar cristae. Moreover, in Case 2 some tumour cells showed a number of giant mitochondria with severely destructed internal matrix. Spindle cell oncocytoma of the anterior pituitary is often misdiagnosed entity of uncertain histogenesis. It should be considered in the differential diagnosis of various sellar-region lesions of oncocytic morphology.
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PMID:Spindle cell oncocytoma of the adenohypophysis - a clinicopathological and ultrastructural study of two cases. 2092 1

Papillary tumor of the pineal region (PTPR) is a newly recognized distinct entity in the 2007 World Health Organization nomenclature. This tumor is characterized by epithelial-appearing areas with papillary features and more densely cellular areas that often display ependymal-like differentiation. Ultrastructurally, this rare neuroepithelial tumor possesses neuroendocrine, secretory, and ependymal organelles that likely originate from the subcommissural organ (SCO) near the aqueduct of Sylvius. To date, approximately fifty-seven described cases worldwide have been recognized, with ages ranging from 5 years to 66 years (mean age=32 years). Clinical presentation most often includes headache and obstructive hydrocephalus. The tumor, which is well circumscribed, may be cystic and radiographically is often considered to be consistent with the findings of a pineocytoma. Microscopic evaluation often demonstrates a lesion with papillary areas lined by epithelioid tumor cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and more cellular areas with cells exhibiting clear or vacuolated cytoplasm. Perivascular and true rosettes may be identified. Distinctive immunohistochemical features including reactivity for keratins (AE1/AE3, CAM 5.2, CK18) and only focal GFAP staining help distinguish this neoplasm from an ependymoma. The relative paucity of data compiled for this tumor makes giving an accurate diagnosis and prognosis a daunting task. We discuss two additional cases of PTPR that presented to us within a three-month span in order to more fully elucidate the possible presentations of this rare entity. Furthermore, we examine now 59 reported cases of PTPR in order to review the current diagnostic and treatment modalities in addition to exploring emerging research encompassing this unusual neoplasm.
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PMID:Papillary tumor of the pineal region: two case studies and a review of the literature. 2184 77

The authors describe a case of paraganglioma of the sellar region in a young female patient with loss of vision and headache. She presented with amaurosis, depression, anxiety and amenorrhea. Clinical and radiological impression was that it was a meningioma or pituitary adenoma. She received bromocriptine with no reduction of the lesion. She developed panhypopituitarism, but with normal levels of prolactin. It was resected and histological examination revealed nests of large cells with moderate nuclear pleomorphism, vesicular nuclei with occasional nucleoli. There were rare mitotic figures, but no necrosis. Immunohistochemistry was positive for synaptophysin, chromogranin A, and neuron-specific enolase with a few sustentacular cells positive for S100. The Ki67 proliferation was 1-2%. All pituitary hormonal antibodies were negative as well as GFAP, AE1/AE3, p53 and EMA. Paragangliomas affecting the sellar region are extremely rare and might be due to the presence of remnants of paraganglionic tissue or abnormal migration. The patient's post-operative diabetes insipidus remains under medical control.
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PMID:33 year-old woman with a large sellar tumor. 2305 Aug 74

We report a case of a 35-year-old female patient who presented with worsening headaches, vertigo, and vision changes. MRI of the brain showed an enhancing lesion in the pineal region. The patient was taken for resection of the lesion which was classified as neuroendocrine carcinoma of the pineal parenchyma, intermediate grade. Histologically, the neoplasm was cellular, mitotically active, and composed of tightly packed cells with high nuclear cytoplasmic ratio, scant cytoplasm, and ill-defined cell borders. Immunohistochemically the tumor cells were positive for chromogranin, synaptophysin and AE1/AE3, and negative for CK-7, CK-20, and TTF1. Possible metastasis from any other primary sites was ruled out clinically. This represents the first reported case of neuroendocrine carcinoma of the pineal parenchyma.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine carcinoma of the pineal parenchyma. The first reported case. 2774 68