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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Testing of delayed hypersensitivity responses to recall antigens, newly encountered antigens and tumor antigens has contributed to the understanding of several immunologic factors in human neoplasia. Patients with
Hodgkin's disease
tend to have depressed responses to both newly encountered and recall antigens. Patients with solid tumors are more likely to be deficient only in the response to newly encountered antigens. In patients who have intact response to recall antigens, reactivity to antigen preparations from tumor and control tissue may be studied. Tumor-associated or organ-associated antigens have been demonstrated by delayed hypersensitivity responses in leukemia, Burkitt's lymphoma, malignant melanoma and
carcinoma of the lung
, breast, cervix uteri and intestine. Approaches to a definition of the specificity of these reactions are described. The results with these tumor antigen tests correlate strongly with the clinical course. This is a promising technique for monitoring immunotherapy. The results from tests with recall and newly encountered antigens also correlate with the clinical status and perhaps with prognosis. Various possible interpretations of these changes are discussed. Further work should be directed toward an exact definition of immunologic defects in patients with cancer and toward the use of this understanding for a rational program of immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Immunologic evaluation of patients with cancer by delayed hypersensitivity reactions. 12 44
Cancer chemotherapy was purely palliative until the early sixties. Tumor cures have been since obtained, first in malignant trophoblastoma and Burkitt's lymphoma, and more recently in
Hodgkin's disease
, diffuse histiocytic lymphoma, acute lymphocytic leukemia in children, Wilms's tumor and osteosarcoma. Preliminary data are suggestive of tumor cures in testicular teratomas and, possibly, in small cell
carcinoma of the lung
. Five patients with trophoblastoma,
Hodgkin's disease
, melanoma, chronic myelocytic leukemia and anaplastic
carcinoma of the lung
are briefly presented, all without evidence of tumor relapse 3 years or more after chemotherapy. Theoretical bases for improvement of the curative effect of cancer chemotherapy are discussed, including the development of new agents, and new pharmacological problems concerning drug interactions, complexes of drugs with macromolecules or immunoglobulins and liposomes are considered.
...
PMID:[Curability of malignant neoplasms: value and limitations of chemotherapy]. 21 68
Two patients, aged 29 and 40, with nodular sclerosing
Hodgkin's disease
, in complete remission for four and six years respectively after intensive radiotherapy and combination chemotherapy, developed
carcinoma of the lung
in the previous radiation port. Although radiotherapy and chemotherapy can eradicate
Hodgkin's disease
involving the thorax, this treatment may be associated with the development of a secondary pulmonary malignancy, particularly in a previous radiation port, and several years may elapse before the new tumour becomes evident.
...
PMID:Lung carcinoma after radiotherapy and chemotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. 59 47
The use of the Swan-Ganz flow-directed catheter in establishing the diagnosis of the superior vena cava syndrome in two patients (one with
Hodgkin's disease
and the other with
carcinoma of the lung
) is described. A pressure tracing showing elevated pressure above the obstruction without respiratory or cardiac fluctuations is characteristic of obstruction of the superior vena cava.
...
PMID:Suspected superior vena cava syndrome: the role of the Swan-Ganz catheter. 91 57
Infusion of cycloheximide i.v., an antibiotic known to inhibit synthesis of protein, at a rate of 0.2 mg/kg/hr, reliably caused lysis of fever in 15 chronically febrile patients with
Hodgkin's disease
who did not have detectable bacterial, fungal, or viral infection. Antipyretic effects were also seen in some patients with reticulum cell sarcoma, lymphosarcoma, acute leukemia, histiocytic medullary reticulosis, plasma cell myeloma,
carcinoma of the lung
, and carcinoma of the cervix. The drug failed to produce defervescence in four patients with normal granulocyte reserves, who were febrile due to bacterial infection. When infused at a rate of 0.2 mg/kg/hr, the drug apparently caused an acute alteration of protein metabolism in man in that plasma amino acid nitrogen rose acutely while plasma levels of muramidase and ribonuclease fell during the period of the infusion. The data suggest that continuing synthesis of protein may be involved in nonbacterial fever of neoplastic disease. Mammalian granulocytes and monocytes are known to elaborate a pyrogenic protein following appropriate stimulation; it is suggested that in some types of neoplastic disease, particularly
Hodgkin's disease
, tumor cells may produce and release a pyrogenic protein and that drug-induced inhibition of its synthesis is responsible for the observed lysis of fever.
...
PMID:Antipyretic effect of cycloheximide, and inhibitor of protein synthesis, in patients with Hodgkin's disease or other malignant neoplasms. 109 49
This prospective study was designed to determine the efficacy of iodized talc pleurodesis in patients with pleural effusions. Thirty-four patients underwent this treatment (three bilaterally) between October 1, 1989, and March 31, 1991. All patients had to have complete or nearly complete lung reexpansion after tube thoracostomy with fluid drainage less than 100 ml in 24 hours. A slurry containing 5 gm of talc and 3 gm of thymol iodide was instilled into the pleural space through the chest tube. Chest tubes were removed after complete reexpansion and clearing of the effusions, usually in 3 to 5 days. The patients' ages ranged from 26 to 88 years (average 50 years). Eighteen patients had
lung carcinoma
, two had mesothelioma, and one each had carcinoma of the ovary, breast, or anorectum, multiple myeloma, schwannoma, or
Hodgkin's lymphoma
. Two patients had an unknown adenocarcinoma primary and five other patients had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. One patient had congestive heart failure. Nineteen patients had left, 12 had right, and three had bilateral pleural effusions. The effusion was serosanguineous in 26 and serofibrinous in eight patients. Serial chest radiography showed complete response in all patients. The period of follow-up ranged from 1 to 21 (average 4.9) months, with no recurrences. Twenty-three patients have died during the follow-up period, and there was no sign that reaccumulated pleural effusion existed in any, despite clinical evidence of systemic tumor progression. These observations indicate that intrapleural instillation of a slurry of iodized talc is a safe, adequate, and effective treatment for control of neoplastic or benign pleural effusions.
...
PMID:Iodized talc pleurodesis for the treatment of pleural effusions. 156 70
A probe, recombinant antistasin, that reacts specifically with the activated form of factor X (Xa) was used in immunohistochemical procedures to detect cellular sites of Xa generation within intact tissues. Factor Xa was detected on tumor cells in small cell
carcinoma of the lung
, renal cell carcinoma, and malignant melanoma. Tumor-associated macrophages (but not tumor cells) expressed Xa in adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the lung, and
Hodgkin's disease
. Factor Xa in these locations corresponded to evidence reported previously for an intact coagulation pathway and thrombin formation associated with these tumor cells and macrophages. By contrast, only rare connective tissue cells stained for Xa in breast and colon cancer, tumor types shown previously to lack an intratumoral coagulation pathway and thrombin generation, and in normal liver, lung, breast, kidney, and placental tissues. Hepatocytes did not stain. These results suggest that such probes may be useful for studying the activation state of cell-associated factor X in situ within intact tissues.
...
PMID:Cellular localization of activated factor X by Xa-specific probes. 187 16
Two cases of spontaneous tumor regression (STR) occurring in a patient with non
Hodgkin lymphoma
and in another patient with squamous
carcinoma of the lung
are presented. Both cases fulfill the criteria of STR defined by Everson and Cole. Recent results obtained in basic and clinical studies have indicated that immunological mechanisms could play an important role in STR. The mediator effects more frequently referred are: 1) generation of antineoplastic cytotoxic cells; 2) production of immunoregulatory cytokines by lymphocytes and monocytes, and 3) possible cross reaction between tumor and bacterial antigens. These mechanisms of action are discussed in relation to the presented cases.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous tumor regression. Report of 2 cases]. 228 12
In clinical practice SVC syndrome is an important problem, given both the nature of the disease and its fast lethal evolution. Therapy must be instituted as soon as possible because the chances of a positive result are directly related to the staging of the primary illness. Surgery, chemotherapy and high energy therapy can be used. From the literature, although controversial, the superiority of surgical therapy is clear; particularly if up-to-date vascular reconstruction techniques are employed. From March 1980 to March 1988 8 cases of SVC syndrome were observed in which the aetiology was as follows:
Hodgkin's disease
(2 cases); secondary catheter thrombosis (1 cases);
lung carcinoma
(5 cases). The 2 cases of
Hodgkin's disease
were treated by chemotherapy; the secondary thrombosis by open thrombectomy. In the other 5 cases an innominate vein right appendage by-pass was used (3 PTFE, 2 pericardial grafts). The results were encouraging: complete, long-term remission was observed in the
Hodgkin
and thrombectomy patients. A PTFE graft thrombosis occurred in 2 cases but in the other cases the by-pass is functioning well at a mean 13 months follow-up.
...
PMID:[Our experience in the treatment of superior vena cava syndrome]. 234 46
Neurological disorders associated with a malignant neoplasm, which is not caused by a direct effect such as metastasis, infiltration or compression, is called carcinomatous neuromyopathy. Subacute cerebellar degeneration recognized in this category is characterized by acutely or subacutely progressive cerebellar ataxia and widespread loss of Purkinje cells. There have been several reports of subacute cerebellar degeneration in
lung carcinoma
, ovarian carcinoma and
Hodgkin's disease
, but rare in urogenital malignancies. We present a patient with neurological disorder considered subacute cerebellar degeneration associated with HCG-beta positive seminoma. A 29-year-old man noticed a left intrascrotal mass in the summer of 1984. The mass began to grow in April, 1985 and diplopia, gait disturbance and dysarthria appeared late in May. He consulted our hospital on July 20, 1985. Serum human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG)-beta was elevated to 200 ng/ml but alpha-fetoprotein and carcinoembryonic antigen were normal. Left high orchiectomy was performed and the tumor was diagnosed histologically as typical seminoma. Bulky metastatic tumor was recognized in retroperitoneum on abdominal CT but brain CT was normal. VAB VI chemotherapy was performed. The retroperitoneal metastatic tumor disappeared and HCG-beta was normalized and complete remission achieved, but cerebellar symptoms still remain 14 months after remission. This case is considered to be subacute cerebellar degeneration associated with seminoma and is the second case with testicular carcinoma reported.
...
PMID:[Subacute cerebellar degeneration with HCG-beta positive seminoma of the testis]. 245 60
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