Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (hemoptysis)
6,129 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 23-yr-old female with a history of dyspnea, palpitation, productive cough, occasional hemoptysis, intermittent diarrhea, and abdominal pain was found to have metastatic carcinoid tumor and a "jejunized colon." Carcinoid tumors are relatively rare neoplasms found throughout the gastrointestinal tract, the ovaries, and the lungs. Barium enema showed a normal rectum and a pattern identical to jejunum in the proximal colon. Endoscopic biopsies confirmed the presence of small intestinal mucosa in the colon. Foreshortening of the colon was probably due to a desmoplastic reaction secondary to the carcinoid tumor. Histologic confirmation of these findings has never been described before.
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PMID:Jejunized colon: a rare complication of carcinoid tumor. 812 59

Nine children (6 boys, 3 girls) were diagnosed with a primary endobronchial or pulmonary parenchymal neoplasm. The average age at diagnosis was 9 years. Presenting complaints included cough (7), fever (5), pulmonary infection (3), respiratory distress (3), weight loss (2), pain (2), and hemoptysis (1). Pulmonary x-rays showed persistent atelectasis, pneumonic infiltrates or mass lesions. A computed tomography scan was performed in 8. Five of six endobronchial tumors were diagnosed with bronchoscopy and biopsy. Treatment consisted of thoracotomy and pulmonary resection in 7 cases and laser resection in 2. The pathologic diagnoses were bronchial carcinoid (3), bronchial mucoepidermoid carcinoma (1), inflammatory pseudotumor (plasma cell granuloma) of the bronchus (2) and of the lung parenchyma (1), fibrosarcoma (1), and rhabdomyosarcoma (1). Postoperative chemotherapy was given only to the patient with pulmonary rhabdomyosarcoma; this child died. One child has developed a local recurrence while 7 children are alive and free of disease at an average of 2.4 years postresection. Pulmonary neoplasms are unusual in the pediatric age group and represent a wide spectrum of pathology. Including the present series, 383 tumors have been described. Seventy-six percent were malignant. Early investigation and surgical intervention are essential in children with persistent pulmonary symptoms or x-ray abnormalities. In most cases, the prognosis is excellent with complete surgical resection; however, malignancies other than bronchial adenoma are associated with significantly mortality.
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PMID:Childhood primary pulmonary neoplasms. 830 77

Bronchial carcinoid tumors (BCT) are the most frequent primary pulmonary neoplasms of childhood. Seventeen of 208 patients diagnosed as having BCT at the Massachusetts General Hospital were between 10 and 21 years of age. We reviewed our records of the 17 patients and 8 other pediatric cases and compared their findings with those of seven large series of adults. Distribution was equal between the sexes. The average age at diagnosis was 17 years; 4 patients were < or = 15 years old. The duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis varied from 2 weeks to 2.6 years, with a median duration of 8.5 months. In contrast to adults, no child was asymptomatic. The majority of children presented with wheezing and atelectasis in addition to the characteristic adult triad of cough, hemoptysis, and pneumonitis. Five patients presented with weight loss and one patient presented with hoarseness. One of the 17 pediatric patients presented with Cushing's syndrome and a functional BCT. Twelve of 14 patients were disease free for 9 months to 34 years after surgical resection. We conclude that BCT should be suspected in children with pneumonitis resistant to therapy, atelectasis, wheezing, and hemoptysis. Surgical resection will result in symptom-free recovery in the majority of cases in spite of low-grade malignancy.
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PMID:Bronchial carcinoid tumors in pediatric patients. 838 19

A 50-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital complaining of recurrent bloody sputum and hemoptysis. Chest X-ray films showed an infiltrative shadow in the left lower lung field. Chest computed tomograms showed a nodular tumor shadow near the left B8 and this tumor shadow was found between A8 and A9 by pulmonary arteriography. Bronchoscopic examination revealed a red coagulum in the left B8 and cytologic examination of broncho alveolar lavage fluid revealed atypical squamous cells. With a clinical diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma of the lung, a left lower lobectomy with hilar and mediastinal lymph node dissection was done. A milk-white tumor was found in the lower lobe of the resected lung. The pathological diagnosis of the resected tissue specimen was carcinoid, accompanied by pulmonary, hilar, and mediastinal lymph node metastases. Reduced immunofluorescence by Chromogranin A and serotonin staining were further evidence that the tumor was atypical. This case is very interesting in that the tumor metastasized to the lung and lymph nodes, even-though it was pathologically typical.
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PMID:[Pulmonary typical carcinoid with metastases to pulmonary hilar, and mediastinal lymph nodes]. 869 75

Between 1981 and 1993, 27 bronchial carcinoids were diagnosed in patients living in the Swiss Canton of Ticino, with a mean age of 55 (24-78) years. The incidence was 0.79/100,000 inhabitants. Main symptoms were cough (41%), hemoptysis (30%) and bronchial obstruction such as pneumonia or atelectasis (26%). There were no cases with carcinoid crisis. Preoperative evaluation included chest X-ray (100%), bronchoscopic biopsy (84%), computed tomography (44%) and mediastinoscopy (15%). Some 69% of the patients underwent lobectomy and 15% segmental resection. Pneumonectomy was required for curative surgery in 2 patients. One patient underwent bronchoscopic resection. Surgery is generally indicated. The 5-year survival rate for typical carcinoid was 94% and was significantly reduced to 42% in atypical carcinoid cases (p = 0.02). Prognosis after radical surgery is favorable and depends mainly on lymph node involvement and the histological type of carcinoid.
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PMID:[Bronchus carcinoid tumor in the Tessin canton, retrospective analysis of 13 years and literature review]. 876 75

Lung cancer is the most common malignant cancer in males and it's incidence is rapidly rising in females. Factors linked to this are associated with cigarette smoking, urbanization along with atmospheric pollution. The lack of success in the treatment of lung cancer has to do with in many cases late diagnosis at the stage when surgical treatment is not possible and radio and chemotherapy being of minimal effectiveness. The WHO has proposed the following classification of lung cancer: 1. Squamous cell carcinoma; 2. Small cell carcinoma; 3. Adenocarcinoma; 4. Giant cell carcinoma; 5. Adeno-squamous cell carcinoma 6. Carcinoid. 7. Carcinoma of mucous gland. 8. Others. Early physical signs of lung cancer are: cough (50-80% of patients), dyspnea (10-15%), chest pain (15-20%), hemoptysis (20-50%), recurrent pneumonia and bronchitis (30-50%). More serious clinical signs associated with growth of the neoplasm are hoarseness, pleural effusion, vena cava superior syndrome, and Pancoast's syndrome. The growing neoplasm secrets many biochemical substances, which are them activity passed on the bloodstream or make their way into the blood as a result of degeneration of the tumor. These substances may then be detected in the patient's plasma and act as markers of malignant disease. The characteristics of these markers is varied, e.g.: hormones, enzymes and tissue antigens. Methods used in the diagnosis of lung-cancer which should be stressed, are apart from the obvious physical examination are chest x-rays, ultrasound, CAT scans, nuclear magnetic resonance, PET scans, and scintigraphy. Fine needle aspiration in changes in the peripheral regions, cytology of sputum, bronchial lavage, cytogenetic analysis. This underlines the need for prophylaxis, particularly the cessation of cigarette smoking.
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PMID:[Current capabilities and procedures for diagnosing lung neoplasms]. 919 23

Forty cases of carcinoid tumors of the lung were studied retrospectively from 1989-1993 in the Pathology Department of Hospital Pulido Valente in Lisbon. The mean age of patients was 44 years old, and the presenting symptoms included hemoptysis, cough, thoracic pain, fever, and dyspnea. An endobronchial mass was seen in 75% of the cases. The histopathological study was based on the following morphological criteria: disorganized architecture with increased cellularity (8 cases; 20%), nuclear pleomorphism (14 cases; 22%), the presence of coarse chromatin (19 cases; 30%), increased mitotic activity (13 cases; 21%), enlarged nucleoli (17 cases; 27%), necrosis (12 cases; 25%), vascular permeation (8 cases; 15%), distant metastasis (6 cases; 14%). Chromogranin was the most strongly reliable immunostaining for the diagnosis. In our series the initial routine diagnosis and the diagnosis after morphological criteria evaluation matched, and in 14 cases the final diagnosis was of atypical carcinoids.
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PMID:Typical and atypical lung carcinoids: clinical and morphological diagnosis. 937 49

Clinical presentation, pathology, surgical management and follow-up of ten bronchial carcinoid tumour (BCT) patients are described. There were five male and five female patients with age range between 5 to 85 years (mean 39.2 +/- 21.5, SD). Pathology revealed BCT on the right side in seven and on left side in three patients. The tumour was an incidental finding in four while the other six had respiratory symptoms. Cough was present in all of the later group and hemoptysis was present in four patients. Recurrent chest infections were seen in two patients. Symptoms ranged from 1 week to 15 years. Successful surgical resection was done in nine with the longest follow-up of 80 months (mean: 23 months +/- 26.3, SD) without recurrence or metastasis. Histopathological examination of these tumours revealed classical morphological features in all but one case. Grimelius stain positivity for argyrophilia confirmed the diagnosis in all the patients in this study. Electron microscopic examination was done in patient no. 9 which showed atypical morphological features and neurosecretory granules. BCT may present like pneumonias or bronchial asthma. Although BCTs have low-grade malignancy, early diagnosis and surgical resection yield curative results almost in all cases.
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PMID:Bronchial carcinoid tumours in southern Saudi Arabia. 965 18

Typical pulmonary carcinoid tumors often present as proximal endobronchial masses discovered during the evaluation of cough and/or hemoptysis. We present a case of a carcinoid tumor that presented with spontaneous partial expectoration. A review of the literature revealed 16 cases of expectoration of fragments from various primary and metastatic tumors. Our case appears to be the first report of the expectoration of a carcinoid tumor.
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PMID:Spontaneous partial expectoration of an endobronchial carcinoid. 1045 4

Carcinoids are neuroendocrine neoplasms. Bronchial carcinoids are unusual, malignant primary neoplasms that characteristically involve the central airways and typically exhibit well-defined margins and bronchial-related growth. Bronchial carcinoids include low-grade typical carcinoids and the more aggressive atypical carcinoids. These tumors usually affect patients in the 3rd through 7th decades of life who are often symptomatic with cough, hemoptysis, or obstructive pneumonia. Bronchial carcinoids radiologically manifest as hilar or perihilar masses, with or without associated atelectasis, pneumonia, bronchiectasis, or mucoid impaction. At computed tomography, an anatomic relationship of these tumors to a bronchus is usually seen, and they may show contrast material enhancement or calcification. In rare cases, carcinoids occur in the thymus; when they do, they are aggressive tumors that affect adults who usually present with chest pain, cough, and dyspnea. Thymic carcinoids manifest radiologically as anterior mediastinal masses and may mimic thymomas. Thoracic carcinoids are treated by surgical excision. The prognosis for patients with typical bronchial carcinoids is excellent; patients with atypical bronchial or thymic carcinoids have a worse prognosis.
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PMID:Thoracic carcinoids: radiologic-pathologic correlation. 1033


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