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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (
bowel obstruction
)
9,927
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is associated with highly penetrant germline mutations in mismatch repair genes. Due to a high lifetime risk in gene carriers for synchronous and for metachronous colorectal cancer and endometrial cancer in women, prophylactic and extended surgery are considered as options for gene carriers. A 54-year-old patient with a history of metachronous rectal cancer and a family history fulfilling the Amsterdam criteria presented with carcinoma of the cecum and highly dysplastic adenomas of the splenic flexure and descending colon. As a result of these findings, medical history and molecular diagnosis, the decision was made to perform colectomy and prophylactic hysterectomy with oophorectomy; histological examination of the specimen showed three synchronous colon carcinomas. The 31-year-old son carrying the pathogenic mutation refused to be included in the HNPCC surveillance program. One year later he presented with symptoms of
bowel obstruction
, and a carcinoma of the descending colon was diagnosed. Intraoperatively, in addition to the colon cancer, a
small bowel cancer
and peritoneal carcinomatosis were found. In another family fulfilling the Amsterdam criteria without known germline mutation a woman presented with synchronous cancer of the ascending colon and the lower rectum at the age of 49 years. Proctocolectomy and prophylactic hysterectomy were performed, which revealed an additional colon cancer and endometrial cancer. We discuss approaches for individual decision making for surgery in HNPCC patients. Is a subtotal colectomy indicated in the case of first colon cancer in HNPCC patients, or if the first tumor occurs in the lower rectum, should a proctocolectomy or a restorative proctocolectomy be considered? The aim of prospective clinical studies should be to assess acceptability, survival rates, mortality, and the quality of life in HNPCC patients who have undergone surveillance and standard oncological resections versus extended or prophylactic surgery.
...
PMID:Combined molecular and clinical approach for decision making for surgery in HNPCC patients: a report on three cases in two families. 1176 Sep 4
A laparotomy was performed on a 67-year-old woman with a provisional diagnosis of
intestinal obstruction
from a primary small bowel carcinoma. A pathological examination showed a mucinous adenocarcinoma of the ileum, with no regional lymph node metastases. There was no evidence of any other abnormality in the peritoneal cavity. Ten years after the operation, an abdominal computed tomography scan showed a recurrent tumor in the peritoneal cavity. Primary small bowel adenocarcinoma is rare in all malignant gastrointestinal neoplasms, and very few cases of the ileal mucinous adenocarcinoma have been reported. They are usually diagnosed at an advanced stage; as a result, they have a poor prognosis. We performed a radical operation for the ileal mucinous adenocarcinoma, and long-term survival was obtained. This case suggests that aggressive surgical treatment for an advanced stage of
small bowel cancer
leads to long-term survival.
...
PMID:Primary mucinous adenocarcinoma of the ileum. 2048 Aug 43
Small intestinal neoplasms are uncommon cancers. Benign small intestinal tumors (e.g., leiomyoma, lipoma, hamartoma, or desmoid tumor) usually are asymptomatic but may present with complications. Primary malignancies of the small intestine, including adenocarcinoma, leiomyosarcoma, carcinoid, and lymphoma, are often symptomatic and may present with
intestinal obstruction
, jaundice, bleeding, or pain. Metastatic neoplasms may involve the small intestine via contiguous spread, peritoneal metastases or hematogenous metastases. Because the small intestine is relatively inaccessible to routine endoscopy, diagnosis of small intestinal neoplasms is often delayed for months after onset of symptoms. During last years the increase of small bowel endoscopy and other diagnostic tools allow earlier non-operative diagnosis. Even though radical resection of
small bowel cancer
plays an important role, the 5 yr overall survival remains low.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of small bowel neoplasms. 2049 43
We report the first documented case of ovarian metastasis from a jejunal primary adenocarcinoma in an Australian patient. The presentation was unusual, initially a suspicious abdominal nodule in the epigastric area, which turned out to be an adenocarcinoma of possible intestinal origin. Gastroscopy and colonoscopy were performed with no suspicious lesion identified. Abdominal and pelvic ultrasound imaging showed a complex pelvic mass suspicious of ovarian cancer. Laparoscopy was performed to exclude possibility of ovarian cancer and
small bowel cancer
. The ovarian mass showed similar features from the epigastric nodule, again suggestive of intestinal primary. Definitive diagnosis was obtained when the patient represented 2 months later with malignant
bowel obstruction
requiring palliative resection of the proximal jejunum. This case demonstrates the difficulty in diagnosing ovarian metastasis from a small bowel primary, which has the potential to mimic an ovarian primary tumour clinically, and a large bowel or ovarian primary pathologically.
...
PMID:Challenging diagnosis of a jejunal adenocarcinoma with ovarian metastasis: report of an unusual case. 2358 Jun 81
To study the clinical and diagnostic significance of enteroclysis through nasointestinal decompression intubation, thirty-five patients with small
bowel obstruction
were enrolled. A nasointestinal catheter of 300 cm was placed through the nasal cavity then pushed to the upper jejunum under X-ray realtime monitoring. The patients underwent intra-small-intestinal suction therapy reducing or relieving the obstruction after 3 days. As the catheter reached the lesions, we conducted selective imaging. Using fluoroscopy, we injected 20-100 ml meglumine diatrizoate 76 % and 50-200 ml air via the decompression suction port to produce a double-contrast radiography. The catheter was then retrieved to the upper jejunum, and the X-ray of the small intestine was obtained. All 35 patients had successful intubations. The decompression treatment resolved symptoms in 20 cases and alleviated symptoms in 15 cases. Ten cases underwent surgery. The images obtained by infusing meglumine diatrizoate through the decompression catheter were of good quality. Among the 35 cases, six were absent of any distinct abnormal signs on the X-ray, 15 had adhesive ileus, four had small bowel tumor (three metastatic tumor, one
small bowel cancer
), three had Crohn's disease, three had radiation enteritis (one of the three was mistaken for small bowel metastatic tumor), two had enteric intussusception, one had a polyp in the small intestine, one had ascending colon cancer. The nasointestinal decompression intubation under X-ray monitoring serves a dual function for patients with
intestine obstruction
, by decompressing the small bowel and examining the small intestinal radiographically. The X-rays can confirm the obstruction and provide guidelines for surgery.
...
PMID:Clinical and diagnostic significance of enteroclysis through nasointestinal decompression intubation. 2471 34
Were port a caseof an 82-year-old man who presented with vomiting. Computed tomography(CT)revealed a jejunum tumor and small
bowel obstruction
. Enteroscopy revealed a protruded lesion and biopsy indicated adenocarcinoma. PET-CT revealed nothing without jejunal tumor. Therefore, with a preoperative diagnosis of primary
small bowel cancer
, we performed operation. Surgery indicated peritoneal disseminations and a jejunal tumor 40 cm distal from the ligament of Treitz, and we performed small bowel partial resection. Pathological examination revealed adenocarcinoma originating from a Heinrich type I ectopic pancreas in the jejunum. Ectopic pancreatic cancer in the jejunum is rare, and we review case reports in the literature.
...
PMID:[A Case of Jejunal Ectopic Pancreatic Cancer with Small Bowel Obstruction]. 2939 90
BACKGROUND Primary
small bowel cancer
is a rare malignancy; the common histopathological types are carcinoid and adenocarcinoma. Inflammatory bowel diseases and familial adenomatous polyposis are known risk factors for
small bowel cancer
. Additionally, cases of surgery-induced small bowel adenocarcinoma are sometimes reported after ileostomy. CASE REPORT A 84-year-old woman, who had undergone ileotransversostomy for
intestinal obstruction
due to postoperative adhesion following appendectomy at the age of 31 years, was referred to our hospital for further examination after experiencing abdominal pain in the right lower quadrant for 2 weeks. Laboratory data showed elevated serum levels of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA, 102.9 ng/ml) and carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA19-9, 104 U/ml). Enhanced computed tomography (CT) revealed a 10-cm mass in the terminal ileum and a distention of the ileum and colon in the blind loop, with retention of feces. The patient was suspected of having ileal cancer by preoperative examination; therefore, right hemicolectomy with en bloc resection was performed. The tumor was histopathologically diagnosed as a well-differentiated and mucinous adenocarcinoma of the ileum. At over 12 months after surgery, tumor recurrence had not been observed. CONCLUSIONS Difficulties in diagnosis can cause delays in treatment and lead to poor prognosis, mainly because tumors in the small bowel rarely cause clinical symptoms. Adenocarcinoma of the ileum should be considered in postoperative patients with ileotransversostomy.
...
PMID:Adenocarcinoma in a Blind Loop of the Ileum 53 Years After an Ileotransversostomy Procedure. 2940 80