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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (
hemoptysis
)
6,129
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Continued uncertainty about the prognosis for patients with bronchial adenomata led to a review of the experience of this condition in the Brompton Hospital. Of 72 patients seen between January 1955 and December 1972, 39 were women and 33 men, mean age 45 years, range 9-73 years. The commonest presenting symptoms were
haemoptysis
, cough, sputum, and repeated chest infections. Positive bronchoscopic biopsy occurred in 35 of 43 cases; five of these were originally reported as carcinomata, of oat-cell type in four. Plain chest film abnormality occurred in 69 patients. Seventy-three operative procedures comprised two endoscopic removals, two wedge resections, six bronchotomies, five pneumonectomies, and 58 lobectomies (seven with sleeve resection). Recurrence in three of six bronchotomies--two with adenoid cystic carcinomata (cylindromata)--necessitated further surgery. Lobectomy and lymph node dissection is usually the operation of choice. Histology confirmed 67 carcinoids (eight with atypical histology or lymph node metastases), two adenoid cystic carcinomata, one muco-epidermoid, and two mucous gland adenomata. Prolonged follow-up is especially indicated in patients with adenoid cyst carcinoma and in those with atypical or metastatic
carcinoid
histology. Although such pathology is not incompatible with long survival, of 10 patients in these categories, all five late deaths were probably related to the tumour. However, of 57 patients considered to have had typical
carcinoid
histology and adequate removal of the tumour, there has to date been no tumour-related death, but one patient developed radiosensitive atypical
carcinoid
tracheal tumours nine years later. The actuarially assessed survival of 71 patients undergoing surgery for bronchial adenomata was 75% at 15 years. Specific tumour types should replace the term bronchial adenoma.
...
PMID:Bronchial adenoma: review of 18-year experience at the Brompton Hospital. 18 62
Twenty-four patients with bronchial adenoma seen over a 20-year period are reviewed. Follow-up data was available in all patients. They included 19 with
carcinoid
, 2 with adenoid-cystic carcinoma, and 3 with muco-epidermoid carcinoma. Recurrent pulmonary infection, cough and
hemoptysis
were the most common clinical manifestations. Surgical resection was performed in all but one patient, who was treated by irradiation; bronchoplastic and conservative resectional procedures were used in 5 patients with
carcinoid
adenoma.
Carcinoid tumors
are considered to be very slowly-growing malignant neoplasms that sometimes give rise to metastases to regional lymph nodes. Such metastases were present in only one patient. All patients are alive and well. Adenoid-cystic carcinoma is a more aggressive tumor with a tendency to recur. Much of the difficulty in its treatment is due to its close proximity to the bifurcation of the trachea. One patient was operated upon three times for local recurrences and ultimately died from respiratory failure after the third operation. The other patient received radiation therapy with cobalt and is well, without recurrence, 3 years after the treatment. The 3 muco-epidermoid carcinomas were histologically similar to such tumors of salivary glands but behaved clinically like highly malignant tumors, no patients surviving 8 months after resection. The term bronchial adenoma is a misnomer. The neoplasms grouped under this heading should be called
carcinoid
adenoma, adenoid-cystic carcinoma, and muco-epidermoid carcinoma and considered as separate entities, since the ultimate course and prognosis is definitely different.
...
PMID:[Bronchial adenoma]. 19 6
Thirteen histologically proven cases of bronchial
carcinoid
from the literature and eight cases from the Armed Forces Tumor Registry, all under 20 yr of age, are presented.
Hemoptysis
, cough, and pneumonia were the most frequent presenting complaints. Bronchoscopy defined the lesion in all 16 cases so studied. Gross and microscopic pathology is briefly described, and treatment in these cases outlined. A good long-term prognosis can be expected, except in those cases with a long delay in diagnosis.
...
PMID:Bronchial carcinoid tumors in children and adolescents. 19 21
Three cases of
carcinoid
tumor arising in the trachea are reported and contrasted with carcinoids arising in bronchi and carcinoids in general. Only eleven other documented examples of tracheal carcinoids are found in the English literature. The true prevalence of carcinoids primary in the trachea cannot be accurately determined from the literature because of imprecise nomenclature or because of the failure to distinguish this tumor from carcinoids primary in the bronchus. Presenting symptoms are
hemoptysis
, dyspnea and wheezing, often persisting for many years before the correct diagnosis is made. The treatment of choice is surgical resection of the involved segment of trachea and primary reconstruction. The prognosis is generally good. The tumor metastasized in one of our three cases and in none of the eleven cases in the English literature.
...
PMID:Tracheal carcinoids. 36 20
In the case described, the onset of
haemoptysis
led to the discovery of a rounded opacity at the left base. All investigations being negative, thoracotomy was performed. The diagnosis could then be made by histology. Bronchopulmonary "tumourlets" are rarely seen (184 cases) masses of epithelial cells which are usually discovered by chance within areas of altered pulmonary tissue. Forms with clinical or radiological manifestations are extremely rare, only 4 other cases having been described. The pathogenesis of these tumours has been the object of recent ultrastructural studies which have shown the relationship which exists between "tumourlet" and
carcinoid
tumour. It would thus seem reasonable to classify "tumourlets" amongst the tumours of the diffuse endocrine system. The authors nevertheless feel that it would be premature to name them as bronchial carcinoids of tumourlet type. The concept of "tumourlet" as a separate entity should be retained.
...
PMID:[Bronchopulmonary "tumouriet" Rare aetiology of an isolated rounded opacity (author's transl)]. 67 17
17 cases with bronchial
carcinoid
were reported. 16 cases of them were proved pathologically after pulmonary resection, and the remaining one was confirmed histopathologically through bronchoscopic biopsy. 64.7% was under 40 years of age. The main clinical manifestations were cough,
hemoptysis
, fever and repeated pneumonitis. In one patient, the
carcinoid
was associated with Cushing's syndrome. Chest roentgenograms showed lesions centrally located in 12 cases, and peripherally located in 5 cases. Histological examination revealed 15 typical and 2 atypical
carcinoid
tumors. This disease was usually misdiagnosed as lung cancer, tuberculoma and benign tumors. Chest X-ray examination and fiberoptic bronchoscopic biopsy are helpful to the diagnosis of the disease. Pulmonary resection was performed in 16 cases. Two patients had hilar lymph node metastases, one of them had also involvement of pericardium. There was no operative mortality. In the follow-up study, the disease-free actuarial survival following pulmonary resection was 92.9% at 5 years. 2 patients died. One died of respiratory failure 4 months after pneumonectomy, the other died of pericardium involvement of
carcinoid
8 months after operation. Resection is the only effective treatment for bronchial
carcinoid
.
...
PMID:[Bronchial carcinoid. A clinical, roentgenological and pathological study of 17 cases]. 147 26
Nineteen cases of bronchial
carcinoid
tumor seen over 20 years in a 1,000-bed, tertiary medical center were retrospectively reviewed. They consisted of 0.4 per cent of all patients with lung tumors. Initial complaints were
hemoptysis
, persistent pulmonary infection, chest pain, and diarrhea. Two of the five patients with atypical
carcinoid
tumors came to the hospital with diarrhea as a result of their chemically active tumors. However, seven patients (36%) were asymptomatic and were diagnosed after an abnormal chest radiograph was noted incidentally. Of 13 patients receiving bronchoscopic examination, 9 (69%) had visible tumors. Bronchial biopsy was performed in 7 patients and led to a diagnosis in all seven. Significant bleeding was noted in 3 patients as a result of biopsy. Lobectomy was the most common surgical procedure in this series. Follow-up of these patients was from 6 months to 15 years. The general outcome for patients with typical
carcinoid
was good. However, all patients with atypical
carcinoid
died as a result of dissemination.
...
PMID:Bronchial carcinoid tumor: experience over 20 years. 148 97
We present a retrospective study of twenty patients in whom bronchial carcinoids, and five, peripheric. One case met the criteria of atypical
carcinoid
. The mean age of presentation was 46.66 +/- 17.07 years (15-76), with predominance of the female gender (3:2). Twenty per cent of patients were asymptomatic and in the remainder, the diagnosis suffered an average delay of 19 months since the appearance of symptoms. Such symptoms were cough (50%), recurrent pneumonias (40%), fever (35%),
hemoptysis
(35%), thoracal pain (30%), carcinoid syndrome (10%) and consumptive syndrome (5%). The radiology showed lobular or segmentary atelectasis (40%), nodule/mass (30%), lobular or segmentary consolidation (20%), obstructive pneumonitis (5%) and atypical pleural effusion (5%). Direct endoscopic vision offered a sensitivity of 84.6%, while transbronchial biopsy, just 69.2%. Metastasis in mediastinal, suprarenal, thyroid and brain gangliar chains were detected.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of 20 cases of bronchial carcinoid]. 155 22
From 1970 until 1990, 8,958 cases of primary carcinoma of the lung were diagnosed at the Duke University Medical Center. During the same period, 126 patients (mean age, 53 +/- 13 years) were diagnosed with bronchial
carcinoid
. The overall survival was 78% for 5 years and 71% for 10 years. Surgical treatment in 106 patients included pneumonectomy (15), lobectomy (63 with 9 bronchoplastic procedures), stapled wedge resection (22), and bronchoscopic laser resection (6). The method of diagnosis was chest roentgenography (121), chest computed tomography (77), mediastinal tomography (31), bronchoscopy (81), bronchoscopic brushing and washing (50), bronchoscopic biopsy (40), transthoracic needle biopsy (27), thoracotomy (100), and autopsy (5). Univariate analysis of the medical history, presenting signs and symptoms, diagnostic test results, and pathologic data predicted improved survival (p less than 0.001) for: female sex (n = 58), asymptomatic presentation (n = 47), normal serum serotonin or urinary hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels (n = 76), peripheral location of the primary tumor (n = 50), pathologic stage I or II (n = 91), negative lymph nodes (n = 80), primary tumor 2 cm or less in diameter (n = 67), and typical histology (n = 80). No significance (p greater than 0.1) was observed for age, smoking history, race, family history of
carcinoid
, environmental exposure, or
hemoptysis
. The most important factors affecting survival defined by multivariate analysis were (p less than 0.01) pathologic stage, atypical histology, and asymptomatic presentation. Bronchial
carcinoid
tumors are unique, making up 1% to 2% of primary lung neoplasms and having an excellent prognosis after resection with a 95% 5-year and 93% 10-year survival for pathologic stage I disease.
...
PMID:Bronchial carcinoid tumors: a retrospective analysis of 126 patients. 161 Feb 54
Twenty-seven main bronchial resections (19 left, 8 right) were performed without pulmonary resection between 1975 and 1991. The patients were 17 men and 9 women with an average age of 35 years (range, 20 to 65 years). Tumors comprised 55% of the lesions, including 9
carcinoid
tumors (33%), 2 mucoepidermoid tumors, 2 fibrous histiocytomas, 1 hemangiopericytoma, and 1 large cell carcinoma. Scarring and stenosis secondary to multiple causes occurred in 10 patients (37%). Two patients had miscellaneous lesions. Presenting symptoms included dyspnea (52%), wheezing or stridor (44%), cough (41%),
hemoptysis
(37%), and pneumonia (18%). Preoperative chest roentgenogram was abnormal in 60% of patients, whereas tomograms delineated the lesion in 94%. All patients had bronchoscopy for lesion evaluation. Anesthesia was accomplished through a long single-lumen endotracheal tube in 19 cases and a double-lumen tube in 8 cases. Mobilization and exposure techniques to create a tension-free anastomosis were critical for left main bronchial resections and included pretracheal mobilization (100%), neck flexion (100%), tracheal and main bronchial retraction (85%), aortic and pulmonary artery retraction (44%), and intrapericardial hilar release (33%). All resections were for cure; there was no operative mortality. Morbidity in 4 patients (15%) included an anastomotic stenosis (successfully reresected), prolonged air leak and pneumonia, transient recurrent nerve palsy, and atelectasis. Median 5-year follow-up revealed 92% of patients alive, with only one of two late deaths being disease-related. Main bronchial resection is an ideal technique for selected benign and malignant lesions, allowing complete pulmonary parenchymal preservation.
...
PMID:Main bronchial sleeve resection with pulmonary conservation. 175 80
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