Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

As advances in cancer therapy improve the prognosis of patients with childhood malignancies, awareness of the consequences of treatment methods assumes increasing importance. All cancer treatment modalities are associated with toxic effects, and the spectrum of therapy-induced complications involves all organ systems. Radiologists have a pivotal role in detecting these sequelae, which can be categorized by the affected organ system and by whether they occur (a) at diagnosis or during initial therapy or (b) after the completion of treatment. The first group consists of oncologic emergencies, infectious complications, and irritant effects. Oncologic emergencies can be further categorized as space-occupying lesions (e.g., superior vena cava syndrome or spinal cord compression), vascular abnormalities (e.g., hyperleukocytosis, anemia, coagulopathy), and metabolic emergencies (e.g., tumor lysis syndrome). Common complications developing after completion of treatment include leukoencephalopathy and neurocognitive defects; cataract formation; cardiomyopathy and congestive heart failure; hepatic dysfunction, fibrosis, and cirrhosis; radiation enteritis; renal dysfunction or failure; scoliosis and short stature; hypothyroidism; gonadal dysfunction; graft-versus-host disease; and development of secondary malignancies. Physician awareness of these complications will permit more effective patient surveillance, which may afford patients the opportunity for earlier intervention in these situations and improved quality of life.
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PMID:Complications of cancer therapy in children: a radiologist's guide. 1019 80

More than 90% of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) arise in a chronical hepatitis. When HCC is diagnosed, most of the patients have symptoms in relation to cirrhosis of the liver. Spread metastases are not frequent and the extension to soft tissues is exceptional. We reported a 55 year old patient who had alcoholic cirrhosis and HCC with quickly development. The onset was a spinal cord compression due to soft tissues epidural metastases, seated at paravertebral zone. Plain radiographs and radionuclide bone scans were normal; diagnosis was achieved by magnetic resonance imaging and fine-needle aspiration cytology of the tumor. We have found no bibliographic reference on spinal cord compression due to soft tissues metastases from HCC. We want to point out the importance of including soft tissues metastases in differential diagnosis for radiculopathies with normal radiography and radionuclide scanning in patients at risk, considering also patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.
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PMID:[Spinal cord compression caused by metastasis of soft tissue hepatocarcinoma]. 1063 3

The authors attempted to describe the clinical manifestations of portal-systemic myelopathy (PSM) after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) creation. PSM was developed in four of 212 (1.89%) patients who underwent TIPS procedures in our hospital. Three men and one woman, ranging in age from 41 to 56 years, with a history of posthepatitis cirrhosis and recurrent bleeding from gastroesophageal varices had intrahepatic shunts created with 10-mm-diameter Wallstents. Shunt patency was confirmed by color Doppler ultrasonography (US) in each patient after TIPS creation. Progressive spastic paraparesis involving the lower extremities occurred between 5 weeks and 5 months after TIPS creation in the four patients. Neurologic examination showed evidence of spasticity in all cases, with ankle clonus, extensor plantar responses, and lower extremity hyperreflexia. All sensory modalities remained intact. Cytologic examination of cerebrospinal fluid from each patient was normal. There was no evidence of spinal cord compression on the imaging studies. PSM is a rare syndrome that includes spastic paraparesis with intact sensation. Initially noted in patients who have undergone surgical placement of a portacaval shunt, it also may occur after TIPS creation.
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PMID:Portal-systemic myelopathy after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt creation: report of four cases. 1143 45

HCC is the most frequent primary malignancy of the liver and one of the most common cancers in the world. HCC is substantially a complication of liver cirrhosis, and because HBV and HCV are the predominant causes of chronic liver disease and cirrhosis worldwide, they have a propensity to lead to HCC. Common sites of HCC metastases include the lung, lymph nodes, and portal vein. Bony metastases are rare, and when they do occur the disease is usually far advanced and is associated with clinical manifestations of abdominal pain, weight loss, jaundice, hepato-splenomegaly, ascities, deranged LFTs, and elevated AFP. We report here a patient with asymptomatic advanced HCC, normal LFTs, and normal AFP values presenting with spinal cord compression.
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PMID:Asymptomatic advanced hepatocellular carcinoma presenting with spinal cord compression. 1574 89

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common cancer worldwide with a great potential for metastatic spread. Hepatocellular carcinoma often arises in people with underlying viral hepatitides or liver cirrhosis and may present in various ways including abdominal pain, liver mass, and signs of hepatocellular decompensation. Many tumors may have metastasized to other organs such as the lungs, lymph nodes, bone, and adrenal glands at the time of diagnosis. However, it is uncommon for HCC to present purely due to its metastasis, such as spinal cord compression from vertebral metastasis. Here, an unusual presentation of a sudden cardiovascular collapse due to medullary and cervical cord infarction from compression of the cervical cord is presented. The importance of clinical investigations, the usefulness of postmortem computed tomography scans, and the examination of the cervical spine and cervical cord in people with no obvious cause of death after standard autopsy procedures are emphasized.
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PMID:Sudden Collapse due to Medullary and Cervical Cord Infarction-An Unusual Presentation of Hepatocellular Carcinoma. 3035 22