Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A method for the intraoperative detection of brain tumor propagation is described. Based on the well-known radiophosphorus test, a very sensitive semiconductor probe was tested in 16 brain tumor operations. With this miniaturized sensor, the beta-emission of 32P could be measured with a high topographical resolution. Especially in high-grade gliomas, in meningiomas and in metastases a good discrimination of normal and tumor-infiltrated tissue was possible. The perspectives of a technical improvement of this method and the application of more specific tumor markers are discussed.
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PMID:Topographic studies with 32P tumor marker during operations of brain tumors. 406 68

We report a case in which a 71-year-old man with a giant cell glioblastoma who had a spontaneous intracerebral hematoma including subarachnoid hemorrhage and extraneural multiple metastases followed by the craniotomy 9 months later. He had complained of nausea and vomiting on 20, October, 1981 and admitted to the Ohara hospital. For that reason, he was admitted to our hospital on 29, October, 1981 and a CT scan showed a large subcortical high dence mass accompanied by adjacent edema in the right frontal lobe. Gradually he got worse with Korsakoff's syndrome and motor weakness of the left side. Total removal of the hematoma and adjacent tissue by transcortical route on 24, November, 1981 was performed, followed by 60Co radiation therapy to the local area, chemotherapy and immunotherapy. The surgical specimen showed typical features of giant cell glioblastoma with intratumoral hemorrhage. After 9 months of the operation, he had complained of the subcutaneous tumor in the supraclavicular region and swelling of the right arm. After the second admission on 30, August, 1982, a biopsy of the tumor revealed malignant tumor cells resembling intracerebral giant cell glioblastoma. He died on 29, November, 1982. At autopsy, extraneural metastases were revealed at some lymph nodes, organs and bones. However, a primary tumor was not found in the other organs. Lymph node: cervical, supraclavicular, mediastinal, bronchial, pancreaticoduodenal, hepatic hilus, mesenteric, retroperitoneal, and parastomach. Organ: esophagus, Ileum, jejunum, adrenal gland and kidney. Bone: vertebra (thoraco-lumbar), sternum, rib. Positive reaction to GFA protein antibody was demonstrated in the tumor cells in the periphery of the surgical specimen of the brain tumor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[An autopsy case of extraneural metastases of giant cell glioblastoma with intracerebral hemorrhage]. 408 47

Brain tumors in infants and children are different from those in adults in type and location of tumor as well as accompanying complication. Given this fact, and the fact that these patients are under development, careful consideration is required for determination of treatment planning. Thus, we have investigated the curative results of brain tumors in infants and children and factors effecting prognosis. In this study, medulloblastoma which is one of the most malignant pediatric brain tumors was analyzed in 64 cases in light of mode of metastasis and prognosis. Among those cases, there were 23 cases which were diagnosed to have metastasis or infiltration of tumor from the original site of the fourth ventricle. As mode of the cerebrospinal fluid circulation, 6 intracerebral solitary metastasis, 1 entraspinal cord metastasis, 1 intraperitoneal metastasis via shunt and 7 generalized metastases involving bone in 5, lymphnodes in 2 and liver, spleen, kidney, lung and peintoneal cavity in 1 respectively. The survival rate in those 23 cases with tumor metastasis or infiltration was 63.6% in one year, 28.6% in two years and 11.8% in five years and the average survival year was 8.1 months in cases who died of these tumor metastasis. Six of them had tumor metastasis with in 6 months after the initial treatment(s). There was no significant correlations in rate or occurrence of tumor metastasis between group of total resection and of partial resection nor group of whole neuro-axis radiation and of local radiation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Brain tumors in infants and children--factors affecting prognosis, (Part-3). Mode of metastasis and prognosis in medulloblastoma]. 408 49

More specific therapy can be achieved for brain tumors by identifying morphologic markers like primitive neuroectodermal tumor cells that tend to be radioresponsive and spread diffusely through the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Utilizing clinical manifestations to suspect and then localize the brain tumor, morphologic markers, that can be appreciated with computerized tomography and cerebral angiography as well as at operation, provide a basis for more aggressive extirpation and the usefulness of radiation and chemotherapy. Metastatic neoplasms possess such markers as tumor hemorrhage and meningeal involvement suggesting specific extraneural sources. In almost half of these patients, cytologic examination of the CSF should help to identify the malignant cells. Although most gliomas do not metastasize either within or outside the central nervous system, the occurrence of primitive neuroectodermal tumor cells (undifferentiated malignant small cells) in about 20% of all glioblastomas implies spread throughout the CSF and some radioresponsiveness. With thorough clinicomorphologic evaluations of all patients with brain tumors in concert with liberal clinical consultations, the aggressive, newer therapeutic modalities can be used more effectively.
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PMID:Clinicomorphologic markers for predicting behavior and guiding therapy for brain tumors. 624 79

A case of primary brain tumor composed of two contiguous neoplasms in presented. At operation, a nodular tumor was embedded in the infiltrating tumor within the brain parenchyma. With light and electron microscopy, the nodular tumor was similar to Wilms' tumor (nephroblastoma). The infiltrating tumor was malignant astrocytoma. Autopsy revealed, besides the recurrence of malignant astrocytoma in the brain and its subarachnoid dissemination, extracranial metastases to the abdominal cavity, liver, lung, and bone marrow. Recurrent and metastatic tumors were glioblastoma multiforme, which was more malignant than the surgical specimen. The possibility of metastatic Wilms' tumor from the kidney was completely ruled out by extensive autopsy survey. The authors present an extremely rare tumor including detailed observations on the electron microscopic appearance of the tumor; the histogenesis of these tumors is briefly discussed.
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PMID:Contiguous malignant astrocytoma and Wilms'-like tumor in the brain. 628 Aug 43

Extraneural metastases from malignant glioma and glioblastoma are believed to be rare. The most common sites of metastases are lung, lymph nodes, bone, and liver. We recently encountered two patients with glioblastoma multiforme who presented with pain and thrombocytopenia caused by diffuse metastasis to bone marrow. A premortem diagnosis was established in the first patient with the aid of peroxidase-antiperoxidase staining of the bone marrow biopsy specimen for glial fibrillary acidic protein, a glial-specific marker. In the second patient glial fibrillary acidic protein staining confirmed the glial nature of the primary brain tumor as well as the metastatic tumor in bone marrow. The first patient also had metastatic nodules on the pleural surface and on the fifth rib. All three metastatic foci had similar cellular morphology, suggesting selection of a population of tumor cells with extraneural metastatic potential.
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PMID:Diffuse bone marrow metastasis by glioblastoma: premortem diagnosis by peroxidase-antiperoxidase staining for glial fibrillary acidic protein. 631 36

Primary malignant neoplasms of the nervous system differ from other types of malignancy in several ways. Clinical progression is due to local invasive growth, while metastases outside the skull are rare. The tumors show no sharp delimitation from the surrounding normal tissue. At the edge, an ill-defined area of invasive tumor cells, reacting glial cells and inflammatory cells is present. At the same time the primary brain tumors are biologically heterogeneous. In this review, a short survey of markers for malignancy in primary brain tumors is given, and some properties of importance for invasive behavior, are listed. These include different cellular enzymes, phagocytotic property, locomotive and proliferative characteristics. Studies of primary brain tumors in situ show invasive growth into the surrounding brain tissue, often followed by hemorrhage and necrosis. In addition spread of tumor cells takes place along preexisting intracranial structures. Recently, several systems for the study of brain tumor invasiveness in culture have been elaborated. Both experimental and human gliomas have been tested. The target tissues include organ culture of embryonic chick heart muscle, chorioallantoic membrane, fetal rat brain tissue and reconstructed vessel walls. It has been shown that glioma cells are able to split junctions between normal cells. They destroy and phagocytose the normal cells and penetrate the normal tissue. The use of brain tissue and reaggregated brain cell cultures as target for glioma cells in culture opens the possibility for an elucidation of invasiveness as one of the most important properties of malignancy in the nervous system.
Cancer Metastasis Rev 1984
PMID:Invasiveness of primary brain tumors. 638 24

On CT, mass effect and contrast enhancement have limited value in separating brain neoplasm from infarct, because both findings are frequent with recent infarction. Review of CT in 100 patients with histologically proven supratentorial lesions (35 infarcts and 65 tumors) indicated the specificity of three helpful signs: (1) White matter edema outlined the uninvolved cortex in 73% of metastases and in 74% of gliomas but only in 14% of infarcts. (2) The cortical ribbon was enhanced in 43% of infarcts, in 7% of gliomas, and in 4% of metastases. (3) Selective sparing of the thalamus occurred in 31% of infarcts but only in 7% of tumors.
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PMID:Enhancing mass on CT: neoplasm or recent infarction? 668 68

Two phenomena associated with malignant gliomas are: 1) the ability to metastasize systemically, and 2) the capacity to induce sarcomatous transformation within the supportive mesenchyma. An unusual case is presented of selective metastases of the sarcomatous elements of a mixed gliosarcoma. Immunohistochemical cell staining with glial fibrillary acidic protein was used to confirm the presence of abnormal glial elements in the primary brain tumor as well as the absence of such glial elements in the abdominal metastases.
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PMID:Selective peripancreatic sarcoma metastases from primary gliosarcoma. Case report. 674

A rare case of cerebral neuroblastoma with extracranial metastases is reported. This patient was followed for over ten years. The biopsy specimen of the brain tumor taken at the first operation revealed the architecture of a poorly differentiated ependymoma having perivascular rosettes. The histological pattern of the second biopsy taken eight years after the first operation was highly cellular and vascular with abundant mitoses, showing Homer-Wright rosettes. The histological diagnosis of this second specimen was a cerebral neuroblastoma. The problem of the multipotentiality of the brain tumor is discussed.
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PMID:A cerebral neuroblastoma with extracranial metastases. 728 Sep 73


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