Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The outcome of 75 cases of post-radiotherapy pericarditis severe enough to lead to surgery, was reviewed from 1970 to September 1995. Four clinical forms were identified: acute pericarditis resistant to medical treatment (12 cases), large chronic pericardial effusions resistant to medical treatment (16 cases), chronic, compressive effusions (35 cases) and signs of pericardial constriction (12 cases). The medical conditions irradiated were Hodgkin's disease (41 cases), followed by carcinomas (27 cases), malignant lymphomas, thymoma and seminoma. Forty-three deaths were observed during the study period (only 4 unrelated to the neoplasia or radiotherapy) after a mean interval of 7.4 years after radiotherapy and 2.5 years after surgical biopsy: 25 were related to cardiopulmonary complications of radiotherapy: 14 were due to recurrence of the malignant disease or the appearance of another tumour. Fifty-two pericardial effusion drainage procedures and 28 pericardectomies were performed, due to the necessity for reoperation. The authors have tried to determine therapeutic indications based on recognised physiopathological data and the anatomical aspects of the four different clinical forms. The prognosis is affected by post-radiotherapy fibrosis which extends beyond the pericardium to involve other cardiac structures and the pulmonary parenchyma. However, it must be emphasised that the initial survival of all these patients was due to the radiotherapy.
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PMID:[Post-radiotherapy pericarditis; a clinical and pathological study of 75 cases]. 909 93

A 77-year-old man was admitted because of massive pericardial effusion and cardiac tumor. Cytological examination of the effusion and histological examination of a subcutaneous tumor in the chest wall revealed diffuse large B cell lymphoma. The immunophenotype of tumor cells was CD5+ CD20+ CD22+ CD38+ HLA-DR+ CD19-. Chromosome analysis revealed complex abnormal karyotypes containing t(8;14) (q24;q32). C-myc gene rearrangement was shown by Southern blotting. Chemotherapy with pirarubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristin, and prednisolone (THP-COP) was not effective for his lymphoma. He suffered from cardiac tamponade and died at 5 months after diagnosis. Autopsy revealed a large cardiac tumor, extensive epicardial infiltration, tiny tumors in the lung and pancreas, but no lymphadenopathy, the combination of which suggested a primary cardiac lymphoma. Immunohistochemistry for p53 protein showed nuclear staining of more than 50% of the lymphoma cells. In situ hybridization for EBER-1 was negative. Rearrangement of c-myc gene and overexpression of p53 protein are usually observed in Burkitt's lymphoma and some cases of high grade lymphomas including AIDS-associated non-Hodgkin lymphomas. In this case the association of these molecular findings and resistance to chemotherapy is suggested.
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PMID:[Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma mainly involving the heart and showing t(8;14) (q24;q32) with c-myc rearrangement]. 936 67

7 patients, 4F/3M aged 20-63 years (x = 39.5 yrs) with high grade non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4 pts), Hodgkin's disease (1), acute leukaemia (1) and blastic crisis of CML (1), complicated by massive pericardial effusion with impending cardiac tamponade were presented. Symptoms of neoplastic pericardium infiltration have appeared at the diagnosis of underlying disease in 2 pts, in the remaining 5.5-24.5 months (mean = 12.5 months) since the diagnosis and onset of cytostatic treatment was established. In 6 pts pericadiocentesis or pericardium drainage have been applied, resulting in evacuation of 100-1450 ml (mean = 680 ml) of fluid. In 3 pts pericardial effusion was bloody and in two some neoplastic cells were found. In 4 pts intrapericardially 5-20 mg mitoxantrone, 5-20 mg, was administered 7 times. The survival time since the diagnosis of a massive pericardial effusion ranged 0.5-10 months. One person remains alive 7 months after diagnosis of cardiac effusion and 19 months from the diagnosis of n-HL. The authors conclude that pericardiac involvement in the course of haematologic malignancies is a very unfavorable event.
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PMID:[Massive pericardial effusion during the course of hematological diseases]. 949 5

Pericardial effusions are not uncommon in patients with an advanced malignancy Rarely malignancies may present initially with a pericardial effusion. Cytological examination of pericardial fluid may be valuable in differentiation of these cases. However, a metastatic tumour in serous effusion may not always show the functional differentiation of the primary tumour. In such a situation, although a wide range of special studies have been suggested for the diagnosis of malignancy we have found the use of a panel of a few common immunostains to be useful in confirming or suggesting the site of a primary tumour. The material for this study consisted of 76 pericardial fluids obtained between January 1991 and October 1998 from 46 males (mean age 59 years) and 30 females (mean age 52 years). Metastatic malignancy was diagnosed in 22 of the 76 patients and in 7/22 cases pericardial effusions were the initial presentation. The subsequent follow-up in the seven cases revealed adenocarcinoma of lung (n = 2), small cell anaplastic carcinoma of lung (n = 1), squamous cell carcinoma lung (n = 1), melanoma leg (n = 1), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma retroperitoneal lymph nodes (n = 1) and carcinoma of the breast (n = 1). Of the remaining 15 cases with a known history of malignancy, eight had cancers (three adeno; two small cell; one poorly differentiated, and two squamous cell types) of the lung; breast (n = 3); colon (n = 1); melanoma (n = 2) and non Hodgkin's lymphoma (n = 1). Immunostains which were useful in the diagnosis were EMA, CEA, cytokeratin, B72.3, HMB45, vimentin, S100, LCA, L26 and kappa and lambda light chains.
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PMID:The usefulness of a panel of immunostains in the diagnosis and differentiation of metastatic malignancies in pericardial effusions. 1101 58

In this study the authors describe a case of acute pericarditis occurring at 26 weeks' gestation in a woman affected by Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome and with a history of Hodgkin's Lymphoma and autoimmune hypothyroidism. The patient was first admitted to the 4th Medical Pathology Unit of the University of Florence, where moderate pericardic effusion with no evidence of heart tamponade was documented by ultrasound scan. Subsequently the patient was cared for on outpatient basis at the Centre of Perinatal Medicine of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology of the University of Florence. Since all examinations and tests aimed at defining the etiology of pericardial effusion were negative, an idiopathic acute pericarditis was diagnosed. The patient was given prednisone at a dose of 75 mg per day; owing to episodes of paroxystic atrial fibrillation, propaphenon was also administered intravenously to treat acute episodes and orally as prophylaxis. The patient underwent close control of both heart function (by means of ultrasound scans of the heart and dynamic EKG) and pregnancy (blood tests, ultrasound scans and Doppler velocimetry). At 36.5 weeks' gestation a healthy fetus was spontaneously delivered. Three months after delivery, the patient underwent an ultrasound scan that demonstrated the complete reabsorption of the effusion.
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PMID:[Acute pericarditis in pregnancy. Report of a case]. 1108 50

Primary pericardial Hodgkin's disease is extremely rare, increasingly so in the decades of modern imaging. We illustrate one of these atypical presentations, with absent mediastinal lymphadenectomy and with pericardial effusion successfully managed by video-assisted thorascopic surgery (VATS).
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PMID:Video-assisted thoracoscopic management of primary pericardial Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1137 12

A 49-year-old female was referred with recurrent pericardial effusion following mantle field radiotherapy for Hodgkin s lymphoma. She underwent video-assisted thoracoscopy and resection of a pericardial window. Intraoperatively she suffered a cardiac arrest and subsequently died in the early postoperative period despite maximal therapy. Pathological examination revealed extensive myocardial fibrosis and multiple nodules of pericardial mesothelioma. The latter has hitherto not been recognised following mediastinal radiation. The cardiac complications of mantle field radiotherapy are discussed.
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PMID:Pericardial mesothelioma following mantle field radiotherapy. 1139 45

Primary cardiac lymphoma, which is very rare, is generally regarded to have a poor prognosis. A case of a 69-year-old man with primary cardiac lymphoma diagnosed by antemortem examination is reported. A computed tomography scan of the chest demonstrated a huge right atrial mass with invasion into the other chambers. No mediastinal lymphadenopathy was detected. Cytologic analysis of pericardial effusion revealed diffuse large B-cell type non-Hodgkin malignant lymphoma. The patient died on the 18th day of chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunomycin, oncovin, and prednisone) due to low-output syndrome and multiple organ failure. At autopsy, massive gray-white tumor almost occupied the right atrium and invaded the right inferior lobe of the lung. Although prognosis of primary cardiac lymphoma remains poor, early diagnosis may improve the prognosis.
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PMID:Primary cardiac lymphoma--a case report. 1195 18

We present the case of a 66-year-old man with a history of coronary artery disease and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) who was admitted to the hospital complaining of chest discomfort and shortness of breath on exertion. The echocardiogram revealed a severe pericardial effusion and a large echogenic mass that infiltrated the lateral wall of the right atrium and ventricle and created a moderate tricuspid valve stenosis. B cell intracardiac non-Hodgkin lymphoma/CLL was diagnosed, and the patient was treated with six courses of CHOP chemotherapy. After the third course, the mass disappeared and the patient's general condition was substantially improved.
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PMID:One-year follow-up of a patient with reversible tricuspid valve stenosis due to lymphomatic mass into the right atrioventricular wall. 1237 8

Echocardiography is a sensitive method for detecting wall motion abnormalities, as well as for monitoring cardiotoxicity during treatment with anthracyclines. Using echocardiography, this study investigated possible acute cardiotoxicty associated with primary treatment of Hodgkin's disease according to German Hodgkin's Lymphoma Study Group (GHSG) clinical trial protocols for adults. A group of 88 patients (48 men) was registered in the prospective, randomized clinical trial involving the treatment of Hodgkin's disease using third and fourth generation GHSG protocols. These patients were monitored by echocardiography. The average age was 34 years (range, 18-65; median, 32). The average anthracycline dose was 174 mg/m2 (median 200 mg/m2), and the average mediastinum irradiation dose was 21 Gy (median 30 Gy). Left ventricle end-systolic diameter (ESD) and left ventricle end-diastolic diameter (EDD), as well as fractional shortening (FS) and ejection fraction (EF) (M-mode calculation) were evaluated, as was the presence of pericardial effusion and wall motion abnormalities. The examinations were conducted before and at the end of therapy (up to 2 months). Results show that all evaluated parameters changed from one follow-up examination to the other, but these changes did not reach statistical significance. ESD increased from 30 +/- 4 to 31 +/- 4 mm. EDD increased from 49 +/- 4 to 49 +/- 5 mm. Ejection fraction changed from 69 +/- 7 to 66 +/- 7% and fractional shortening was unchanged (from 38 +/- 7 to 38 +/- 7%). In seven patients (8%), we observed new wall motion abnormalities characterized by hypokinesis without decrease of left ventricular function. Significant changes in the amount of pericardial effusion were not observed. In four patients (5%), there was progression of Hodgkin's disease. In conclusion, treatment according to third and fourth generation clinical trial protocols of the GHSG leads only to minimal wall motion changes, without concomitant reduction of left ventricular function, thus not meeting the criteria, acute cardiotoxicity.
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PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of acute cardiotoxicity in the treatment of Hodgkin disease according to the German Hodgkin's Lymphoma Study Group. 1261 19


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