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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cowden's disease (CD) is an autosomal dominant disorder which confers a high susceptibility to diverse benign and malignant tumors. The PTEN (phosphatase and
tensin
homologue deleted in chromosome ten) gene has been identified as a tumor suppressor gene responsible for cancers of the endometrium, ovary, prostate, and glioblastomas. Recently, germline mutations of this gene were also found in patients with CD, and it is now recognized as a gene responsible for this disease. We identified a germline nonsense mutation at codon 130 in exon 5 of PTEN in a 56-year-old Japanese woman with CD. The patient had adenoid facies and mucocutaneous lesions including multiple facial papules, acral keratoses on neck and shoulders, palmoplantar keratoses, multiple oral papillomas, scrotal tongue, mucosal and cutaneous hemangiomas, and a sclerotic fibroma on the arm. She also had benign and malignant polypoid neoplasms throughout the entire digestive tract, including adenocarcinoma of the colon and submucosal lipomas of the rectum, as well as bilateral breast carcinomas, multinodular goiters, an ovarian cyst with a fibroma-like nodule, hepatic hemangiomas, and abdominal
hernia
. We searched CD cases with the same genotypic PTEN mutation as the present case and compared their phenotypes. Further studies will disclose a better understanding of the role of mutation in the PTEN gene in the course of tumorigenesis of both benign and malignant tumors developed in patients with CD.
...
PMID:Germline mutation of the PTEN gene in a Japanese patient with Cowden's disease. 1129 50
The diagnosis of soft-tissue masses in children can be difficult because of the frequently nonspecific clinical and imaging characteristics of these lesions. However key findings on imaging can aid in diagnosis. The identification of macroscopic fat within a soft-tissue mass narrows the differential diagnosis considerably and suggests a high likelihood of a benign etiology in children. Fat can be difficult to detect with sonography because of the variable appearance of fat using this modality. Fat is easier to recognize using MRI, particularly with the aid of fat-suppression techniques. Although a large portion of fat-containing masses in children are adipocytic tumors, a variety of other tumors and mass-like conditions that contain fat should be considered by the radiologist confronted with a fat-containing mass in a child. In this article we review the sonographic and MRI findings in the most relevant fat-containing soft-tissue masses in the pediatric age group, including adipocytic tumors (lipoma, angiolipoma, lipomatosis, lipoblastoma, lipomatosis of nerve, and liposarcoma); fibroblastic/myofibroblastic tumors (fibrous hamartoma of infancy and lipofibromatosis); vascular anomalies (involuting hemangioma, intramuscular capillary hemangioma, phosphate and
tensin
homologue (PTEN) hamartoma of soft tissue, fibro-adipose vascular anomaly), and other miscellaneous entities, such as fat necrosis and epigastric
hernia
.
...
PMID:Fat-containing soft-tissue masses in children. 2786 58