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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (
bowel obstruction
)
9,927
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malignant melanoma
shows an unusual predilection to metastasize to the small intestine. Three patients with
malignant melanoma
involving the small bowel are reported. One patient was operated on for small
bowel obstruction
and the other two for gastrointestinal bleeding. Two patients remained well 6 and 2 years, respectively, after surgery. One patient died of metastatic melanoma 4 years post-operation. Metastatic melanoma in the small bowel should be suspected in any patient with a previous history of
malignant melanoma
who develops GI symptoms or chronic blood loss. Surgical treatment was the first choice; the prognosis after surgical resection was much better than for other organ metastases or simultaneous metastases of the small bowel and other organs.
...
PMID:Small bowel metastases of malignant melanoma: palliative effect of surgical resection. 1056 99
The first case of cancer in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was reported at The Mount Sinai Hospital in 1925 in a patient with ulcerative colitis (UC). In 1956, carcinoma of the jejunum was described in a patient with regional enteritis (Crohn's disease [CD]). IBD cancers are preceded by dysplasia, and the relative risk increases with duration of the IBD. CD cancers are more proximally distributed than are UC cancers. Both tend to occur at the site of the overt disease and both develop at earlier ages (47 UC, 50 CD) than in the de novo colorectal cancer (70 years). The absolute cumulative colon cancer frequencies (8% UC, 7% CD) are identical after 20 years, emphasizing the importance of regular surveillance in both types of IBD. Moreover, the increased risk of colon cancer exists in patients with CD even when CD is confined to the small bowel, and patients with IBD have increased risks of developing extraintestinal and reticuloendothelial tumors in both CD and UC, as well as ano-vulval and
malignant melanoma
in CD. Colitic colorectal cancers are often diffuse, extensive, multiple and right-sided with insidious presentation. The prognosis is no worse after operation than that of de novo colon cancer. Most small bowel cancers in CD are adenocarcinomas, rather than sarcomas, and present at a younger age, more diffusely and more distally than de novo cancers, usually making them undiagnosable at a curable early stage; indeed, two-thirds present with
intestinal obstruction
. Strictures of the colon are common in patients with IBD, and they have a 10-fold risk for colon cancer, 30-fold for UC, and 6-fold for CD. The risk increases with disease duration. The indications for surgery are absolute, relative and incidental, and the procedures include segmental resection, total proctocolectomy, subtotal colectomy and palliative procedures.
...
PMID:Cancer in inflammatory bowel disease. 1082 8
Metastases are a common feature during the evolution of breast cancer. However, gastrointestinal metastases, and especially ceco-appendicular ones, are very rare.
Melanoma
however frequently metastasize in the gastrointestinal tract. Ceco-appendicular metastases do not display any specific signs in cancerous patients. These rare metastases must be considered in the diagnosis of right lower quadrant pain in cancerous patients. The main differential diagnosis includes neutropenic enterocolitis, acute appendicitis, malignant
intestinal obstruction
and perforation of the bowel. The morbidity of gastrointestinal complications in patients with metastatic cancer receiving chemotherapy is significant and surgery is often the only chance of survival. The major clinical decision is whether or not to operate.
...
PMID:Metastatic involvement of ceco-appendicular segment: a diagnosis of right lower quadrant abdominal pain in patient receiving chemotherapy. 1114 19
Small intestinal neoplasms are uncommonly encountered in clinical practice. They may occur sporadically, in association with genetic diseases (e.g., familial adenomatous polyposis coli or Peutz-Jeghers syndrome), or in association with chronic intestinal inflammatory disorders (e.g., Crohn's disease or celiac sprue). Benign small intestinal tumors (e.g., leiomyoma, lipoma, hamartoma, or desmoid tumor) usually are asymptomatic but may present with intussusception. Primary malignancies of the small intestine-including adenocarcinoma, leiomyosarcoma, carcinoid, and lymphoma-may present with
intestinal obstruction
, jaundice, bleeding, or pain. Extraintestinal neoplasms may involve the intestine via contiguous spread or peritoneal metastasis. Hematogenous metastases to the intestine from an extraintestinal primary are unusual and are most typical of
melanoma
. Because the small intestine is relatively inaccessible to routine endoscopy, diagnosis of small intestinal neoplasms is often delayed for months after onset of symptoms. When the diagnosis is suspected, enteroclysis is the most useful imaging study. Small bowel endoscopy (enteroscopy) is increasingly widely available and may permit earlier, nonoperative diagnosis.
...
PMID:Small intestinal neoplasms. 1158 39
Malignant melanoma
metastases in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) are found in more than 60% of autopsies on patients who have died with disseminated
melanoma
; however, the rate of GIT metastases detected clinically averages only 2%. This discrepancy seems to be attributed to the nonspecific symptoms and signs of GIT involvement, which include weakness, fatigue, bleeding, anemia, and abdominal pain. Sometimes a diagnosis is only made when
bowel obstruction
occurs. We report a case of long-term survival after surgery for multiple
melanoma
metastases in the gastrointestinal tract and review the relevant literature. Both our case report and the literature review demonstrate the benefits of surgery for patients with
melanoma
metastases in the GIT. We also stress the need for meticulous follow-up, detailed history-taking, and rapid evaluation of any vague and unclear abdominal signs and symptoms for patients with
melanoma
.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal metastases from malignant melanoma: report of a case. 1517 May 54
A case of
malignant melanoma
metastatic to small bowel mesentery in an old female is reported. Her primary
malignant melanoma
of nasal mucosa was already treated. She presented with
intestinal obstruction
, underwent surgical excision of the tumour and was tumour-free postoperatively.
...
PMID:Metastatic melanoma of mesentery. 1522 34
The small and large intestines are the most common sites for metastases from cutaneous
malignant melanoma
. However, primary melanomas in these sites are exceedingly rare. There are several case reports of patients with primary
melanoma
of the small bowel, but finding of a solitary primary
melanoma
in the colon is exceedingly rare. We describe a patient that was operated on for
bowel obstruction
due to colonic intussusception resulting from a right colonic tumor. Histopathological examination confirmed a diagnosis of
malignant melanoma
. A thorough postoperative investigation did not reveal a primary lesion in any other site. Two years after surgery, there was no evidence for recurrent disease. The treatment and prognosis of metastatic and primary
melanoma
of the gastrointestinal tract is discussed as well as the embryonic base for development of primary
malignant melanoma
of the intestine. Primary
malignant melanoma
of the intestine is an extremely rare lesion that may arise in the large bowel as well. It must be differentiated from other intestinal tumors and mandates a thorough investigation to rule out the possibility of being a metastasis from another more common primary site.
...
PMID:Primary malignant melanoma of the right colon. 1527 92
From post-mortem case records, the small bowel is the most frequent site of metastatic melanoma in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, with gallbladder involvement occurring in 15% of cases. However, few cases have been documented in living patients and, when found, are associated with a poor prognosis. We report a case of a Caucasian man with metastatic gallbladder and small bowel
melanoma
from an unknown primary. He presented with diffuse abdominal pain, vomiting and progressive asthenia; subsequently,
intestinal obstruction
occurred. He had no past history of
malignant melanoma
and the primary lesion was not found. The multiple lesions, together with the absence of mucosal involvement in both the gallbladder and small bowel, led us to believe that the lesions were metastatic deposits from a probably regressed primary
melanoma
. It should be emphasized that surgical resection for
melanoma
metastatic to the GI tract is recommended for palliative reasons and can be performed safely. The clinical presentation, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of previously reported cases of
melanoma
metastatic to the gallbladder and small bowel are reviewed. The differences between primary and secondary GI tract melanomas are also discussed.
Melanoma
Res 2004 Oct
PMID:Melanoma metastatic to the gallbladder and small bowel: report of a case and review of the literature. 1545 2
Malignant melanoma
is one of the most common malignancies to metastasize to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Metastases to the GI tract can present at the time of primary diagnosis or decades later as the first sign of recurrence. Symptoms may include abdominal pain, dysphagia, small
bowel obstruction
, hematemesis, and melena. We report 2 cases of
malignant melanoma
metastatic to the GI tract, followed by a review of the literature. The first case is a 72-year-old man who underwent resection of superficial spreading
melanoma
on his back 13 years previously who presented with dysphagia. A biopsy specimen of a mucosal fold in a gastric fundus noted during endoscopy was taken and revealed metastatic
malignant melanoma
, which was resected 1 month later. Three weeks later, the patient was found to have an ulcerated jejunal metastatic melanoma mass, which was also resected. The second case is a 63-year-old man with an ocular melanoma involving the chorold of the left eye that had been diagnosed 4 years previously, which had been excised several times, who presented with anorexia, dizziness, and fatigue. He was found to have cerebellar and stomach metastases. He underwent adjuvant radiation therapy, chemotherapy, and surgical resection of the gastric
melanoma
metastasis. In patients with a history of
melanoma
, a high index of suspicion for metastasis must be maintained if they present with seemingly unrelated symptoms. Diagnosis requires careful inspection of the mucosa for metastatic lesions and biopsy with special immunohistochemical stains. Management may include surgical resection, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, observation, or enrollment in clinical trials. Prognosis is poor, with a median survival of 4 to 6 months.
...
PMID:Metastatic malignant melanoma of the gastrointestinal tract. 1661 May 71
Small bowel obstruction in an oncology patient is a common and serious medical problem which is associated with diagnostic as well as therapeutic dilemmas. While the condition is most commonly caused by postoperative adhesions and peritoneal carcinomatosis, other causes have been reported [Cormier WJ, Gaffey TA, Welch JM, et al. Linitis plastica caused by metastatic lobular carcinoma of the breast. Mayo Clinical Proceedings 1980;55:747-53; Clavien P-A, Laffer U, Torhos J, et al. Gastrointestinal metastases as first clinical manifestation of the dissemination of a breast cancer. European Journal of Surgical Oncology 1990;16:121-6; Bender GN, Maglinte DD, McLarney JH, et al.
Malignant melanoma
: patterns of metastasis to the small bowel, reliability of imaging studies, and clinical relevance. American Journal of Gastroenterology 2001;96:2392-400; Gatsoulis N, Roukounakis N, Kafetzis I, et al. Small bowel intussusception due to metastatic
malignant melanoma
. A case report. Technical Coloproctology 2004;8:141-3; Hung GY, Chiou T, Hsieh YL, et al. Intestinal metastasis causing intussusception in a patient treated for osteosarcoma with history of multiple metastases: a case report. Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology 2001;31(4):165-7; Chen TF, Eardley I, Doyle PT, Bullock KN. Rectal obstruction secondary to carcinoma of the prostate treated by transanal resection of the prostate. British Journal of Urology 1992;70(6):643-7; Kamal HS, Farah RE, Hamzi HA, et al. Unusual presentation of rectal adenocarcinoma. Roman Journal of Gastroenterology 2003;12(1):47-50; Hofflander R, Beckes D, Kapre S, et al. A case of jejunal intussusception with gastrointestinal bleeding caused by metastatic testicular germ cell cancer. Digestive Surgery 1999;16(5):439-40]. One of these, reported thus far in only very few patients, is obstruction caused by secondary tumors, i.e. metastases from other organs to the small bowel wall. As cancer patients live longer with improved therapy, physicians are more likely to cope with rare phenomena of neoplasms, such as small
bowel obstruction
caused by secondary tumors. We hereby present a review of the relevant medical literature. The goal of this article is to define current knowledge on this phenomenon, with emphasis on its epidemiology and clinical characteristics, and to increase the awareness of the clinician treating cancer patients of such possibility.
...
PMID:Small bowel obstruction caused by secondary tumors. 1690 10
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