Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Breast metastases in cases leukemia are very rare and occur primarily in patients with acute myeloid leukemia. We report the involvement of breast metastases in a 30-year-old woman with acute T cell lymphoblastic leukemia. The patient's mammograms revealed an extremely dense pattern with ill-defined, denser mass-like lesions in both breasts. A bilateral breast ultrasonographic evaluation revealed lobular-shaped and partly ill-defined hypoechoic masses with a multi-septated nodular (mottled) appearance.
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PMID:Acute lymphoblastic leukemia presented as multiple breast masses. 1972 36

Breast metastases in cases of leukemia are rare. We aimed to report the conventional-advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of unilateral breast involvement of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and review the literature. A 32-year-old woman was first diagnosed with ALL in treated in 2004. She did not continue the follow-up after 2008. She was presented with a giant, progressive right breast palpable mass in 2010. Mass, contralateral breast tissue were evaluated with MRI, diffusion weighted imaging and MR spectroscopy. With MRI findings, lesion was evaluated as malignant, tru-cut biopsy revealed recurrence of ALL. Lymphoma, malignant melanoma, rhabdomyosarcoma are most common tumors metastase to breast. Breast metastases of leukemia are rare and occur primarily in patients with acute myeloid leukemia. Secondary ALL breast involvement is uncommon. In a patient with malignancy, any enlarging breast mass, even with benign radiologic appearance, should be investigated carefully and metastasis should not be forgotten.
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PMID:Giant breast involvement in acute lymphoblastic leukemia: MRI findings. 2280 48

Metastases to breast accounts for 0.5-1.3% of all breast malignancies, with the exclusion of leukaemia and lymphoma. These have a wide range of clinical and radiological manifestations and their diagnosis is difficult. There is a need to distinguish them from primary breast carcinoma to prevent unnecessary mastectomy. Imaging and immunohistological correlation plays a vital role in distinguishing this. Our case series review describes the clinical presentation, radiological and histopathological appearances of three patients who presented to our institution.
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PMID:Metastases to the breast: great radiological mimicker of primary breast carcinoma and a forgotten entity. A case series of three patients and a review of the literature. 3036 26