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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 non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) are usually generalized diseases and can involve almost any organ or tissue. Nevertheless also primary extranodal disease is frequent in NHL and some localizations are accomplished by a worse prognosis (brain, testicle) other, in particular primary gastrointestinal involvement, can be cured in a high percentage of cases with surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The gastrointestinal localization's symptomatology is not characteristic: abdominal pain is frequent and other symptoms can be present in other gastrointestinal diseases. Endoscopy, radiology and surgery are the most important diagnostic procedures. The first gives important information about the disease and it permits pre-operative diagnosis. The second is useful to detect both nodal extension (CT scan and MRI imaging) and intrinsic stomach or bowel involvement (contrast radiology of the gastrointestinal tract). The third is an important diagnostic and therapeutic moment. Some Authors recently don't agree with this invasive procedures routinely because of its potential morbidity and mortality. The determination of the extent of disease in patients with NHL is very important and serves multiple purposes: information regarding the imminence of potential complications, indication of prognosis and treatment planning. The most used staging system is the Ann Arbor scheme, originally designed for HG disease. This scheme is inadequate in particular for primary gastrointestinal NHL. Others, like Blackledge or Mushoff schemes show more correlation between tumor burden, nodal and extranodal involvement. An exact diagnosis, precise staging and a correct treatment bring to a potential curability.
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PMID:[Procedures for staging primary gastrointestinal lymphoma]. 853 68

This review deals with the applications of 67Gallium (Ga) scintigraphy for the initial staging and follow-up during and after treatment of patients with Hodgkin's or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). During the last decade, the technique of visualization has been largely improved by using higher doses and additional tomography. Here, the indications for 67Ga scintigraphy in comparison with CT and MRI are discussed. The conditions resulting in false positive and false negative results have been outlined. 67Ga may detect unusual involved sites during staging procedures. However, the major contribution to the management of Hodgkin's disease and NHL is the evaluation of residual masses, because 67Ga uptake reflects the metabolic activity of the tumor. The review ends with an additional short overview of other radionuclide imaging methods useful for malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Role of 67Ga scintigraphy in localization of lymphoma. 862 73

594 patients with Hodgkin's disease were treated from 1983 to 1993 at the Department of Radiotherapy and Institute of Hematology, "La Sapienza" University, Rome, Italy. 385 patients presented mediastinal involvement; CT and/or chest radiography showed residual mediastinal masses in 96 of them (25%). In this study we included only the patients treated after 1986; they were examined with MRI of the chest (24 patients) and 67Gallium scintigraphy of the mediastinum (44 patients) with or without SPECT, combined with high-dose 67Ga in some cases. Eighteen patients underwent both MRI and 67Gallium scintigraphy. MR accuracy, sensitivity and specificity were respectively 75%, 86% and 86%; gallium scintigraphy had 86%, 77% and 93%. These data were confirmed by the results fo the subgroup of 18 patients submitted to both exams; MRI had higher sensitivity (80% vs. 75%) and lower specificity and accuracy (83% vs. 80% and 72% vs. 67, respectively) than 67Gallium scintigraphy. The predictive value of MR-scintigraphy agreement is high: indeed, no false negatives or false positives were observed when MR and scintigraphy results were in agreement.
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PMID:[Assessment of residual mediastinal tumor in patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma using computed tomography, magnetic resonance and 67Ga scintigraphy]. 868 66

Scintigraphy with 67Ga-citrate indicated the transition of an orbital pseudotumor into a lymphoma by a distinct increase in 67Ga avidity. The patient initially presented with a pseudotumor in the right orbit that was verified by CT and MRI. It was caused by a chronic reactive lymphocytic inflammation extending from the lacrimal gland. At that time, scintigraphy was negative. Six and a half weeks later, the tumor had not responded to therapy and scintigraphy then showed a striking increase in gallium avidity. Consequently the tumor was excised and histology ultimately revealed a high-grade non-Hodgkin's T-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:Gallium-67-citrate scintigraphy of high-grade T-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 879 Feb 8

Hodgkin's disease has not been reported to produce an isolated cavernous sinus syndrome, although this phenomenon is well-described in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. We review the 16 cases of cavernous sinus syndrome caused by non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and report two patients with Hodgkin's disease in clinical remission who developed recurrent disease in the cavernous sinus. MRI revealed a mass lesion in the left cavernous sinus in each patient. Corticosteroids and radiation therapy were effective palliative measures. In both patients, recurrence in the cavernous sinus preceded other systemic evidence of recurrent Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Cavernous sinus syndrome in Hodgkin's disease. 886 16

Diplopia is one of the neuro-ophthalmic manifestations that can be observed during HIV-infection. The etiologic agents of diplopia in HIV-positive patients can be identified with HIV itself or opportunistic pathogens or other related conditions. We reviewed the clinical records of 13 HIV-positive patients with mono or bilateral diplopia, focusing on etiologic agents, clinical evaluation and prognosis. This review encompassed all cases observed from January 1992 to June 1995 at the Infectious Diseases Department, Policlinico S. Matteo, University of Pavia. All patients underwent a complete ophthalmologic examination, including visual acuity, anterior segment evaluation with biomicroscopy, dilated indirect ophthalmoscopy and ocular motility evaluation (with Cover test and Hess-Lancaster test). If requested by clinical findings, radiologic (TC and/or MRI) and cerebrospinal fluid examination were performed in some patients. The most common causes of diplopia-CNS lesions or ocular diseases-, resulted in agreement with those reported in the literature (T. gondii, C. neoformans, non-Hodgkin lymphomas, HIV, JC virus, CMV). We were able to confirm, according to our experience, that diplopia occurrence is often a negative prognostic factor, since it is commonly associated with CNS conditions. In most cases diplopia can herald a near demise (8 patients on 13 died with 60 days from diplopia onset). In those cases where a treatment was available (2 cases of cryptococcosis, 1 case of neurotoxoplasmosis and 1 case of CMV retinitis) a complete resolution of neuro-ophthalmic symptoms was achieved.
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PMID:[Clinical significance of diplopia in HIV infection. Assessment of a personal caseload and review of the literature]. 904 2

Gallium-67 citrate (67Ga) can be considered one of the most widespread viability radiotracers. Several papers have recently been published on the use of 67Ga in different diseases, with emphasis on its value in the management of lymphoma patients. This paper critically discusses the role of gallium scintigraphy in several diseases on the basis of our personal experience and of the latest literature data, to integrate the diagnostic knowledge of radiologists, oncologists, nuclear medicine and laboratory physicians. From a clinical point of view, the best application is in neoplastic diseases, particularly lymphoma, but also in inflammatory conditions. Gallium scan sensitivity is very high (80-90%) in the staging and follow-up of Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and this method is also of great importance during the follow-up of lymphoma patients. We recommend scintigraphy to study the residual mediastinal mass after treatment. The recent experience of the National Cancer Institute (Milan) in the follow-up of 189 lymphoma patient showed the major role of gallium scan, compared with MRI, in the study of the mediastinal region after treatment. Both sensitivity and specificity were very high (90 and 96.9% vs 88.7 and 89.2% respectively). Gallium scintigraphy can also be used to study the disease-free interval, post-treatment survival, the early signs of a recurrence and also of treatment response times. The comparison of the survival curves of 33 diffuse large cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients, examined at the National Cancer Institute, showed a statistically significant difference (log-rank test: p = 0.0125) between patients with positive and negative gallium scan after 4-6 cycles of chemotherapy. As for inflammatory diseases, gallium scintigraphy can play a major diagnostic role in pulmonary conditions, e.g., sarcoidosis, in AIDS-related respiratory diseases, in pneumoconiosis and in some cases of "fever of unknown origin". The contribution of this technique consists in localizing an infection focus and assessing the inflammatory disease activity, thus permitting a better therapeutic approach.
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PMID:[Scintigraphy with radiogallium in oncologic and non-oncologic diseases. State of the art and main indications]. 912 70

This article reviews MRI techniques and results in the assessment of bone marrow in patients with lymphoma. MRI is more sensitive than blind biopsy (BB) in detecting bone marrow invasion. False-negative results have been reported in low-grade non Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Bone marrow imaging is particularly indicated in patients with Hodgkin's disease, high grade NHL or myelocytic leukemia, with a negative BB and abnormal clinical (stage B, bone pains) or biochemical data (elevated alkaline phosphatase) and who have relapsed. During treatment. MR imaging is a valuable tool for the evaluation of response and the diagnosis of benign bone marrow complications. Knowledge of post-therapeutic patterns is essential to avoid misinterpretations. The main drawback with this technique is its inability to differentiate residual lesions from fibrosis and needle guided-biopsy is mandatory if treatment decision-making relies on the MR result, alone.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of the bone marrow in lymphomas and leukemias. 913 Jun 14

In the past few years, non-Hodgkin's lymphomas have been paid increasing attention to because of their recently increasing frequency. We reviewed the MR images of 17 patients with histologically proved primary CNS lymphoma, all of them immunocompetent at diagnosis. We studied the site, number and shape of the lesions, the presence and grade of edema and possible periventricular spread. The exams were performed with 0.5 T and 1.5 T MR units, using SE sequences on the sagittal, axial and coronal planes, before and after Gd-DTPA administration. The most typical neuroradiologic signs which may suggest the diagnosis of CNS lymphoma are deep or periventricular lesion site, diffuse and marked contrast enhancement, poorly defined borders, moderate edema surrounding the mass and a tendency to periventricular spread. MRI demonstrated 35 lesions in 17 patients. The lymphoma was unifocal in 9 cases (53%) and 7 lesions were localized in subtentorial site. Lesion size did not exceed 2 cm in 49% of cases, ranged 2-4 cm in 40% and exceeded 4 cm in 11% of cases only. These lesions and hypo- to isointense on T1-weighted images (97%) and their signal intensity varies on T2-weighted images, with mainly iso-/hypointense patterns (79%). All lesions enhanced after Gd-DTPA administration, 74% of them markedly and 26% moderately; enhancement was mostly homogeneous (80% of cases). Perilesional edema was observed in 74% of cases. In conclusion, MRI yields some useful information for the diagnosis of primary CNS lymphoma, but the clinical and radiologic signs of this lesion may exhibit aspecific signal features, meaning that no correct diagnosis can be made even in immuno-competent patients.
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PMID:[Magnetic resonance features in cerebral primary lymphomas in non-immunocompromised subjects]. 922 16

Dural sinus thrombosis (DST) has been reported in association with cancer in both adults and children. We describe the seven patients seen with this complication in our centre between 1981 and 1995. Diagnosis was confirmed by either cerebral CT scanning, MRI or angiography. Median age was 13 years (range 8-15). Six patients were boys. Six children were being treated for non-Hodgkin lymphoma and one for neuroblastoma. Presenting symptoms were seizures and transient neurologic deficit, often preceded by headaches. The probable cause of DST was found in two cases. Tumour localisation in the central nervous system (CNS) probably caused DST in one patient who was treated for ki 1 lymphoma. Dehydration in combination with a poor general condition seemed to be the cause of DST in the patient with neuroblastoma. In five children with stage III or IV non-Hodgkin lymphoma (three lymphoblastic lymphoma; two Burkitt's lymphoma), etiology remained unknown. In these children, DST occurred early in the course of therapy. The median interval between start of chemotherapy and onset of symptoms was 19 days (range 8-40). No child had received L-asparaginase. Prognosis was favourable, with symptoms completely disappearing without therapy within 1 to 5 days. The incidence of DST in patients with advanced stage non-Hodgkin lymphoma during induction and consolidation was calculated to be below 3%. We conclude that DST is rarely diagnosed in children with cancer. Occurrence during the initial phase of therapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma is associated with a benign prognosis.
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PMID:Dural sinus thrombosis in children with cancer. 1211 89


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