Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From 1972 to 1976 patients at the Gustave Roussy Institute were irradiated for
Hodgkin's disease
using a modified fractionation schedule (3 fractions of 3.3 Gy per week) for operational reasons. From 1964 to 1971 and from 1977 to 1981, a more conventional regimen (4 fractions of 2.5 Gy per week) was used. The rates of the late complications in these two subsets of patients treated with different fractionation schedules at the same total dose of 40 Gy during the same overall time were compared. Mediastinitis was observed in 19% of the '4 X 2.5 Gy/week' group versus 56% in the '3 X 3.3 Gy/week' group. Pericarditis in 0% versus 9%, gastroduodenal ulceration and severe gastritis in 10 versus 21% and small
bowel obstruction
in 5 versus 8%. When using the linear quadratic model with an alpha/beta of 2.5 Gy to evaluate the equivalent dose of 40 Gy given in 12 fractions of 3.3 Gy when delivered by fractions of 2.5 Gy, a value of 46.6 Gy is found. This difference of 6.6 Gy in the equivalent doses (for late toxicity) is likely to account for the significant increase of late radiation injuries, such as mediastinitis and pericarditis, in the present study. The local relapse rate was found to be slightly lower in the 3 X 3.3 Gy group. However, this possible benefit cannot offset the considerable increase of late complications.
...
PMID:Late toxicity of radiotherapy in Hodgkin's disease. The role of fraction size. 339 Mar 43
There are only infrequent complications from intermediate dose infradiaphragmatic radiation to the para-aortics or para-aortic and iliac nodal regions as given in
Hodgkin's disease
or seminoma. Nonetheless, such complications can cause significant debility and may be lifelong. Treatment related factors associated with such complications should be identified and where possible, avoided. We have analyzed the records of 1,026 patients treated nationwide in the Patterns of Care Outcome. Studies including the
Hodgkin
's national practice survey (387 patients),
Hodgkin
's large facility survey (253 patients), and Seminoma national practice survey (386 patients). There were 883 patients who received infradiaphragmatic radiation to the para-aortics or para-aortic and iliac regions. Complications which occurred in these patients included gastrointestinal injury, hepatitis, nephritis, gonadal injury, hematopoietic injury, second malignancy, and miscellaneous others. There were 139 complications of any severity and 35 major complications requiring hospitalization for management. The 3-year actuarial complication rates were 14% and 4% for any and major complications, respectively. There was a statistically significant increase in both any complications and major complications with dose (p less than .01). The most frequent complications were those related to gastrointestinal injury such as peptic ulceration, hemorrhage, chronic diarrhea, and
intestinal obstruction
. Major bowel complications comprised 60% (21/35) of major complications and increased with dose from 1% for doses less than 3,500 cGy to 3% for doses greater than or equal to 3,500 cGy (p = .03). This study indicates that total dose is an important factor in determining complications, particularly gastrointestinal injury, in patients receiving infradiaphragmatic radiation in
Hodgkin's disease
and seminoma and that prior G.I. disease is associated with an increased risk of radiation related bowel complication. The radiotherapist should seek to optimize the therapeutic ratio in these diseases where gross disease can be controlled with 3500 cGy or less with few exceptions.
...
PMID:Complications from large field intermediate dose infradiaphragmatic radiation: an analysis of the patterns of care outcome studies for Hodgkin's disease and seminoma. 339 25
Pathology and prognosis of 378 cases of IML collected from 28 colleges or hospitals, are reported. The ratio of male and female was 2:1. Ages ranged from 3 to 86 years with a peak age of 21-50. Main symptoms were abdominal pain, mass,
intestinal obstruction
, diarrhea and intestinal bleeding. The tumor occurred, in order of incidence, in small intestine (42%), ileocecal region (30%), colon (13%), cecum (8%), rectum (3%), duodenum (2%) and anorectum (1%). Multifoci were found in 43 cases (11%). Grossly, the tumor was divided into three types: exophytic, ulcerative and diffuse infiltrative. In histology, follicular type comprised 4% (16 cases) and diffuse type, 96% (362 cases). In the latter, the majority was cleaved, non-cleaved or mixed cell type originating from the follicular center cells. There were a few T cell lymphomas and true histiocytic types but no
Hodgkin's lymphoma
. Statistically, the prognosis was significantly related to the depth of invasion, gross type, tumor size and stage. By histology, lympho-plasmacytoid type and small lymphocytic type had better prognosis compared with the other diffuse types. In this series, 83 patients were treated by surgery (including operation plus chemotherapy). The survival rate of less than 1 year was 51%, nearly equal to the survival rate of more than 1 year (49%). 10 patients have survived more than 5 years and 6, more than 10 years, 2 of them, more than 18 years. It indicates that the operation plays an important role for prolonging survival. Early detection, early diagnosis and early operation are necessary.
...
PMID:[Pathology and prognosis of 378 cases of primary intestinal malignant lymphoma (IML)]. 341
A series of 50 patients with malignant lymphoma, proven by biopsy, was retrospectively studied. 39 were non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and 11
Hodgkin's disease
. 45 (90%) had been misdiagnosed because of lack of initial specific symptoms. It is suggested that for patients with a painless progressively enlarging superficial lymph node without adhering to its surrounding tissues and irresponsive to general management, having irregular fever, bloody stool, abdominal pain or mass, complication of partial
intestinal obstruction
, sharp vigilance be kept for the possibility of malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:[Misdiagnosis of malignant lymphoma--report of 45 patients]. 345 41
This is a survey of 234 pediatric patients in whom staging laparotomy/splenectomy was carried out (1975 to 1981) in the course of the Intergroup
Hodgkin's Disease
in Childhood Study (IHDCS). Relapse has occurred in 44 of these patients, and 12 have died, 7 secondary to extension of lymphoma, 2 with herpes or pneumocystis infections, 2 with leukemia, and 1 from an unrelated accident. During the period of surveillance (mean 5.5 yr), five episodes of bacterial sepsis (positive blood cultures) have occurred, including two due to Streptococcus pneumoniae; and three, to Hemophilus influenzae. The former occurred in the small group of patients in this series who had not received the prescribed pneumococcal vaccination. No fatalities were associated with these septic episodes.
Intestinal obstruction
secondary to adhesions (benign) occurred in eight patients and was managed without intestinal resection or mortality. One patient required operative release of an obstructed ureter following laparotomy, and one, oophorectomy for an infarcted (transposed) ovary.
...
PMID:Postsplenectomy sepsis and other complications following staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease in childhood. 348 87
Two hundred and ten previously untreated patients with
hodgkin's disease
underwent staging laparotomy at one institution. Medical records of these patients were retrospectively reviewed. The incidence of small
bowel obstruction
(SBO); whether or not the patient received abdominal radiotherapy and the portals used; whether or not the patient had undergone a previous operation for unrelated disease; and the outcome of operative treatment for the SBO were noted. Mean follow-up for all patients was 62.6 months (1 to 125 months). Ninety-two patients (Group I) were treated without radiotherapy; two developed SBO (2.2%). Patients treated with abdominal radiotherapy numbered 118 (Group II); seven developed SBO (5.9%). The difference between Groups I and II is not significant. Eighty-two received only paraaortic radiotherapy; two (2.4%) developed SBO. Thirty-six patients underwent combined paraaortic and bilateral iliac radiotherapy (Group IV); five developed SBO (13.9%). Data for Groups III and IV approach statistical significance (p = 0.053; Fisher Exact Test [two-Tail]). All obstructions were secondary to adhesions. Four patients in Group IV had significant morbidity associated with operative treatment of SBO. This was an infection in each case. Infections developed in these patients even when the bowel was not entered. Pneumonia and wound infections were most common. Careful evaluation postoperatively for signs of infection and aggressive pulmonary toilet are recommended.
...
PMID:Effect of postoperative radiotherapy on the development of small bowel obstruction in patients undergoing staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease. 408 64
This is a study of 234 children and young adult patients entered in the Intergroup
Hodgkin's Disease
in Childhood (stage I-II) Study from November 1975 to June 1981 and followed for a mean of 3.8 years after laparotomy. All patients had a staging laparotomy with total splenectomy, liver biopsy, and sampling of abdominal lymph node groups. Four patients (1.7%) have had documented sepsis, and three have had possible sepsis. There has been no sepsis-related death.
Intestinal obstruction
requiring operation was noted in four patients (no intestinal resection required). Urgent operation was necessary in two patients, one with ureteral obstruction and one with ovarian torsion, following a repositioning procedure, neither of these patients died. Organisms in the four patients with positive blood cultures were Streptococcus pneumoniae (two) and Haemophilus influenzae (two). Of the 234 patients in the study, 194 (83%) had received polyvalent pneumococcal vaccine, and 174 (74%) were taking prophylactic antibiotics. One of the two patients with pneumococcal sepsis had not been vaccinated, and the second was vaccinated only during radiotherapy. Only one of the four patients with positive blood cultures was on a prophylactic antibiotic treatment regimen at the time of the septic episode. The liabilities in employing laparotomy-splenectomy for the evaluation of pediatric patients with
Hodgkin's disease
include both general surgical complications and an increase in the risk of hyperacute infection, specifically related to encapsulated species. The latter appears to be modified to a major degree by current prophylactic measures or therapy.
...
PMID:Complications related to 234 staging laparotomies performed in the Intergroup Hodgkin's Disease in Childhood study. 647 52
Two cancer-prone families are reported. In the first one four first-degree relatives over three generations presented a colonic carcinoma, three of them at a proximal anatomic site. For grandmother and father these occurred at ages of 43 and 54 years, respectively, for the son and the daughter at ages of 26 and 22. The grandmother underwent a palliative ileotransversostomy, surgery typically associated with a bad prognosis, but she survived for forty years that initial neoplasm and had an hysterectomy with oophorectomy at age of 63 for endometrial malignancy; she deceased at age of 83 a few days after surgical treatment of tumoral small
bowel obstruction
: pathological evaluation disclosed a fourth cancer on first duodenum. The second kindred shows over three generations 11 cancer-affected individuals, three of them with double primary cancer: breast and sigmoid, breast and endometrium, colon and
Hodgkin disease
. This pedigree includes 8 colorectal neoplasms occurring at 47 years of mean age. These findings are consistent with the cancer-family syndrome and hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer described by Henry Lynch upon four criteria: high frequency of adenocarcinoma, excess of multiple primary malignancies, synchronous or metachronous, early age of onset of cancer and autosomal dominant inheritance. Moreover the hereditary colon cancer is usually localised to the proximal colon, not associated to polyposis coli and allows a prolonged survival. Up to day such families are only identified by pedigree data. The identification of a cancer-prone family calls for an active follow-up of relatives putatively at risk starting at the age of 15 to 20.
...
PMID:[Familial cancer of the colon without polyposis and the familial cancer syndrome. Apropos of 2 cases over 3 generations]. 666 87
Staging laparotomy (multiple liver and lymph node biopsies and splenectomy) was performed at the North Carolina Baptist Hospital in 123 patients with
Hodgkin's disease
. There were no deaths. Wound, pulmonary, intra-abdominal or urinary tract complications developed in 17 patients. Of those complications, one case each of pelvic abscess, subphrenic abscess, small
bowel obstruction
, staphylococcal peritonitis and subphrenic hematoma required a major intra-abdominal operation. The patients were classified on the basis of histopathology; nodular sclerosis--40, mixed cellularity--44, lymphocyte predominant--24, lymphocyte depleted--13, and undetermined--2. The pathological stage following laparotomy was unchanged from the clinical stage in 62%, reduced in 15%, and advanced in 23%. Subsequent therapy, therefore, was altered in 38% of the patients. Lymphangiography, done in 108 patients, showed lymph node involvement in 46 patients and no involvement in 62 patients. Of those lymphangiographic findings, 79% were confirmed histopathologically, 19% were falsely positive, and 1.8% were falsely negative. There were positive findings of
Hodgkin's disease
in the spleen in 42% of patients. The staging laparotomy continues to be a valuable tool in the staging and treatment of
Hodgkin's disease
.
...
PMID:Staging laparotomy in Hodgkin's disease. 736 20
Laparoscopic surgery is becoming widely accepted as an alternative to conventional procedures. It is becoming more and more evident that laparoscopic techniques can be applied successfully to pediatric patients. Advantages of these techniques include less postoperative pain, decreased ileus, fewer pulmonary complications, and shorter hospital stays. Elective splenectomy for hematologic disease or for staging of
Hodgkin's lymphoma
also appears to be amenable to laparoscopic techniques. This report details 12 consecutive splenectomies successfully performed laparoscopically since July 1993. No case required conversion to laparotomy. Each case was reviewed with respect to operative time, estimated blood loss, identification of accessory spleens, time until full oral intake, analgesia requirements, and length of stay. Factors contributing to morbidity such as ileus, pulmonary complications, and would infections were evaluated. Documentation was also reviewed for late sequelae such as
intestinal obstruction
and incisional hernias. These patients were compared with 20 consecutively treated patients who underwent open splenectomy in the period immediately preceding the use of laparoscopic splenectomy. Laparoscopic splenectomy, in the authors' experience, is a safe alternative to open splenectomy, has few complications, is cost effective, and has been well accepted by patients and families.
...
PMID:Pediatric laparoscopic splenectomy. 747 83
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
Next >>