Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (hepatocellular carcinoma)
71,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Symptomatic pituitary metastases are uncommon and have been reported mainly in autopsy series. Although all types of malignancies can metastasize to the pituitary gland, a review of the literature has indicated that lung and breast carcinomas are the most frequent primary tumors while hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis has only recently been described. A 59-year-old man with abdominal pain and fever was admitted to our hospital. Hepatosplenomegaly was present without signs of ascites. Laboratory tests showed only abnormal hepatic biochemistry while the radiological studies revealed a solid mass occupying the left hepatic lobe. The patient underwent excision of the left hepatic lobe and was closely followed-up. Six months later he readmitted with headache and visual disturbances. MRI revealed a solid mass in the sella region pressing the optic chiasma. Transsphenoidal excision of the pituitary mass was followed and the histological examination of the tumor was compatible with hepatocellular carcinoma. Symptomatic pituitary metastases are uncommon and may be difficult to differentiate from pituitary adenomas. The present case emphasizes on the capricious nature of hepatocellular carcinoma and on the importance of the individualized therapeutic approach.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis in the pituitary gland: case report and review of the literature. 1282 21

The value of the combined in-phase (IP) and opposed-phase (OP) T1-weighted (T1-W) breath-hold FLASH sequences for hepatic imaging, especially for fat content, was evaluated. Non-contrast-enhanced IP and OP T1-W GRE breath-hold images were obtained in 76 patients refereed for abdominal MRI at 1.5T. 76 patients were divided into three groups for analysis: (1) liver without mass (n = 8); (2) liver with hepatoma (n = 34); (3) liver with haemangioma or cyst (n = 34). Liver/spleen and liver/lesion signal-to-noise (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were assessed for lesion detection. Images between IP and OP sequences were compared quantitatively. The results showed that there was not statistically significant difference in liver/spleen and liver/lesion SNR between IP and OP sequences. In the patients with fatty infiltration, the OP sequences yielded substantially lower values for liver/spleen and liver/lesion SNR than those of the IP sequences. Furthermore, OP imaging showed fatty infiltration in 14 cases and demonstrated hyperintense peritumor rim in 4 cases. In 14 cases of fatty infiltration, many lesions were identified using IP images. The use of IP and OP GRE sequences provides complementary diagnostic information for hepatic lesions and fat content. Focal hepatic lesions may be obscured in the setting of fatty infiltration if only OP sequences are employed. A complete assessment of the liver with MR should include both IP and OP imaging.
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PMID:The value of in-phase and opposed-phase T1-weighted breath-hold FLASH sequences for hepatic imaging. 1284 Sep 14

We describe here a case in which 99mTc-Sn-N-pyridoxy-5-methyltryptophan (99mTc-PMT) scintigraphy was useful in diagnosing renal metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). A 62-year-old man who had undergone hepatectomy for HCC presented 6 years after initial diagnosis with left flank pain and was found on CT and MRI to have a tumor in the left kidney. Hepatobiliary scintigraphy using 99Tc-PMT was performed, and 99mTc-PMT accumulation was found in the tumor. Nephrectomy was performed and metastasis of HCC was confirmed.
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PMID:Accumulation of 99mTc-PMT in renal metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma. 1293 19

A multifocal mouse liver tumor model chemically induced with 5,9-dimethyl-7H-dibenzo[c,g]carbazole was investigated by respiratory-triggered morphological and functional MRI (fMRI) at 4.7 Tesla. The model is characterized by the presence of two tumor types: hypovascular cholangioma and vascularized hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Growth curves measured by 3D-MRI showed limited growth of cholangiomas and rapid growth of HCCs after a latency of about 25 weeks. Functional imaging based on T(2) (*)-weighted fast gradient-echo MRI and carbogen breathing was optimized for liver imaging in mice. A response to carbogen was observed in HCCs but not in cholangiomas. Transversal analysis (50 HCCs) of signal change upon carbogen revealed four different types of response patterns: 1) signal increase upon carbogen administration (74%); 2) small or insignificant signal change (10%), 3) transient signal decrease and delayed increase (8%), and 4) signal decrease (8%). Longitudinal follow-up of a subgroup (N = 17) showed that an initially observed type 1 response, attesting to the presence of a functional vasculature, remained stable for at least 3 weeks in 14 HCCs. A switch from a type 1 response to another response type may be useful for demonstrating, in a noninvasive manner, a disturbance of tumor vasculature induced by anti-vascular or anti-angiogenic therapy.
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PMID:Morphological and carbogen-based functional MRI of a chemically induced liver tumor model in mice. 1293 60

In a 65-year-old female patient, B-mode sonography detected a single focal lesion in the right liver lobe with a diameter < 3 cm. Histopathologic examination revealed a low differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC; G3). Tumor staging was performed by CT (computed tomography) scan and Resovist MRI (magnetic resonance imaging). Both examinations found a single liver lesion without signs of additional focal hepatic lesions. In addition, phase-inversion sonography in the late phase was performed using the ultrasound contrast agent Levovist. This examination of late-phase Levovist uptake detected more than five additional focal hepatic lesions in the right liver lobe, which were invisible by CT scan and Resovist MRI. This finding of multiloculated HCC was very important to decide on the patient's correct therapy. While liver transplantation is the treatment of choice in single HCC < 3 cm, it is contraindicated in multicentric HCC. In the patient described here, hemihepatectomy of the right liver lobe was performed. The histopathologic examination of the resected liver confirmed the diagnosis of multicentric HCC, which was noninvasively diagnosed only by contrast-enhanced sonography, but not by CT scan or MRI.
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PMID:[Contrast-enhanced sonography using Levovist is decisive for staging and therapeutic schedule in hepatocellular carcinoma]. 1496 59

This article provides a brief overview of the current status of commonly employed diagnostic techniques--US, CT, MR, and PET--for the evaluation of liver metastases and HCC as well as a description of imaging in RF ablation and liver transplantation. The various advantages and limitations of the techniques have been outlined. At the present time, at our center, MRI is used most often to evaluate these liver pathologies, due to its high accuracy for lesion detection and characterization.
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PMID:Modern hepatic imaging. 1506 51

In order to investigate new therapeutic strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), an animal model easily reproducible of hepatic tumor is necessary. Several techniques of intrahepatic tumor implantation have been reported in the literature. Many of them have the disadvantage of high rate of artificial neoplastic extrahepatic dissemination, both peritoneal and systemic. These drawbacks interfere with the evaluation of treatment efficacy. In this study we describe a modified technique of intrahepatic tumor implantation in the rat, previously reported by Yang in 1992, which is based on the insertion in the liver, after neoplastic tissue, of a piece of hemostatic sponge (Spongostan) that permits to significantly reduce the rate of artificial neoplastic dissemination. Nine ACI/T rats were used and Morris hepatoma 3924A was implanted in the right hepatic lobe. In all cases an intrahepatic tumor take was documented by MRI and by histological examination. No lung metastases were observed. In only one animal peritoneal and subcutaneous nodules were seen, likely due to a technique mistake. According to tumor growth curve it is possible to observe that, with this technique, a 1 cm tumor nodule is obtainable 10 days after the implantation, without extrahepatic metastases, easily detectable by imaging techniques such as MRI used in this study. In conclusion this modified technique of intrahepatic tumor implantation permits to obtain an intrahepatic tumor animal model which is easily reproducible and suitable for the evaluation of efficacy of experimental therapies for HCC.
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PMID:[Experimental model of hepatic tumor in the rat: description and results of intrahepatic implantation technique]. 1513 14

T2-weighted fast spin echo images and T2*-weighted gradient-echo images of superparamagnetic iron oxide magnetic resonance imaging (SPIO-MRI) have been reported to reflect the number and function of macrophages in reticuloendothelial organs and be useful to differentiate malignant tumors from benign nodules of liver. We tried to prove that contrast-enhanced ultrasound can diagnose hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) by comparing the findings of SPIO-MRI and the findings of the liver parenchyma on the delayed parenchymal phase of ultrasound imaging using the intravenous contrast agent Levovist, not through the evaluation of vascular imaging. Forty-six patients (52 nodules) with histopathological diagnosis of hepatic tumors were studied. They consisted of 11 non-malignant nodules (six regenerative nodules and five dysplastic nodules) and 41 HCC. All the patients were examined by Levovist contrast-enhanced ultrasonography and SPIO-MRI. The delayed liver parenchymal images of contrast-enhanced ultrasound using the intravenous contrast agent Levovist were similar to those observed on SPIO-MRI. The similarity of both findings suggests that delayed phase imaging by Levovist is closely related to the number and function of Kupffer cells in liver tumors. The diagnostic accuracy of contrast-enhanced ultrasound for HCC was high (90.4%) demonstrating that it is as reliable as SPIO-MRI.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of hepatic nodules using delayed parenchymal phase imaging of levovist contrast ultrasound: comparative study with SPIO-MRI. 1516 34

Cerebral lipiodol embolism (CLE) is a rare complication that may occur during chemoembolization. The authors present three cases of CLE during transcatheter arterial chemoembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma. Multiple small nonconfluent hyperintense intracerebral lesions were found on the diffusion-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MRI. Clinical signs completely resolved and MRI lesions markedly improved on follow-up evaluation within a 3-week period.
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PMID:Cerebral lipiodol embolism during transcatheter arterial chemoembolization. 1524 37

It is important to diagnose hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) correctly and in early stage, because viral hepatitis and liver cirrhosis are often complicated by HCC. Noncontrast and enhanced CT and MRI are very useful to visualize and diagnose HCC objectively. Especially, CT and MR imaging with dynamic study is essential to diagnose HCC, because it is usually hypervascular. Dynamic CT and MR study also improve differential diagnosis in the characterization of the tumor. However, to perform useful dynamic study, it is necessary to use a CT unit which can make a helical scan, or a MR system with fast imaging technique available that can obtain more than 15 slices within a single breath hold. Tissue specific contrast medium, such as superparamagnetic iron oxide that is available only on MRI, is also useful for diagnosis of HCC.
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PMID:Multidetector row CT and MR imaging in diagnosing hepatocellular carcinoma. 1538 31


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