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

We report a case of 35-yr-old woman with early cancer in congenital choledochal cyst. She had a five-year history of intermittent right upper abdominal pain and intermittent jaundice. In this period she had a few abdominal ultrasonographies, but the cholelithiasis had not been found. Now, she was admitted to our hospital because she felt right upper abdominal pain with slight jaundice and subfebrile temperature four weeks ago. Abdominal ultrasonography showed enormous dilatation of the common bile duct, which was suspected as choledochal cyst. Computed tomography and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography revealed cystic dilatation of extrahepatic bile duct. An anomalous pancreaticobiliary junction was not found. The patient with congenital choledochal cyst was operated on. The excision of choledochal cyst was done with hepaticojejunostomy Roux-en-Y. There were no lymph nodes metastases. On the central part of choledochal cysts mucosa, it was shown a white plain area of thickness 0.3 cm and 0.8 cm in diameter. Histologically it was well-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma, which was limited to the mucosa and which did not penetrate to other parts of the bile duct wall. From our knowledge, only small number cases of early cholangiocarcinoma in choledochal cyst were until now reported. Nearly eight years after the operation the patient feels very well, and has optimal working ability (Karnofsky 100%).
...
PMID:Early cancer in congenital choledochal cyst. 1474 58

Although overall incidence of laparoscopic port site implants is decreasing, it remains problematic in patients with occult intraabdominal malignancy. Port-site metastases may themselves become the source of new metastases. A 42-year-old man underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy for cholelithiasis. One month later, he was diagnosed with a right colon cancer, for which a right colectomy was performed. Eleven months later, a CT scan showed nodules in the umbilicus (one of the original laparoscopic port sites) and behind the right rectus abdominis muscle, adjacent to the deep epigastric vessels. These sites were resected, and histopathology confirmed metastatic adenocarcinoma. The right deep epigastric nodule was reported to be lymph node-positive for metastatic adenocarcinoma. It is probable that dissemination of cancer cells to this lymph node occurred from the port site implants. Presence of metastasis in the lymph nodes draining the abdominal wall should be examined in all patients with port site implants.
...
PMID:Regional lymph node metastasis from port site implants after laparoscopic surgery. 1580 97

Trefoil factor family protein 1 (TFF1, pS2) interacts with mucins to protect gastrointestinal epithelium against injury and contributes to mucosal repair by promoting epithelial cell migration and restitution. Moreover, TFF1 has antiproliferative and anti-apoptotic effects and promotes cell scattering and invasion. We investigated TFF1 expression in healthy and inflamed non-neoplastic gallbladder mucosa as well as in gallbladder carcinomas (n=57) and corresponding metastases (n=18), using a tissue microarray technique. TFF1 immunoreactivity was absent in healthy mucosa, focally observed in epithelium with inflammatory changes and present in 35% of primary and 24% of metastatic cancer tissues. Immunoreactivity significantly decreased with increasing tumour stage (P=0.009) and increasing tumour grade (P=0.001). Patients with TFF1 positive tumours showed a more favourable outcome compared to patients with TFF1 negative tumours in univariate analysis (P=0.006). However, multivariate analysis proved resection status and tumour grade as the only independent prognostic factors. In conclusion, TFF1 is expressed in inflamed non-neoplastic gallbladder epithelium and in low stage and low grade gallbladder carcinomas. Thus, TFF1 may be the missing link between gallstones, chronic cholecystitis and gallbladder cancer. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether TFF1 immunostaining can be used as a diagnostic tool to identify patients with a more favourable outcome.
...
PMID:Analysis of trefoil factor family protein 1 (TFF1, pS2) expression in chronic cholecystitis and gallbladder carcinoma. 1582 28

Somatostatin-producing endocrine tumors are rare neoplasms usually arising in the pancreas and duodenum and they account for less than 1% of all gastrointestinal endocrine tumors. Besides somatostatinoma syndrome, which is characterized by diabetes mellitus, steatorrhea and cholelithiasis, patients with somatostatin-producing endocrine tumors commonly complain of nonspecific symptoms such as vague abdominal pain, weight loss or changes in bowel habits. Tumor behavior cannot be predicted by histological features alone, and malignancy is determined by the presence of metastases. We report here a case of malignant pancreatic endocrine tumor producing somatostatin presented as relapsing cholangitis who was treated with Whipple pancreatoduodenectomy.
...
PMID:Somatostatin-producing pancreatic endocrine carcinoma presented as relapsing cholangitis -- a case report. 1584 91

Sentinel node biopsy accurately predicts the nodal status of early-stage gastric carcinomas. Nevertheless, surgeons are concerned about missing a micrometastasis in applying the sentinel node-negative finding to surgery. Of 36 patients who underwent D2 dissection based on positive sentinel node biopsy, 15 patients had histologic metastasis in the sentinel nodes, 20 patients in both the sentinel and nonsentinel nodes in the lymphatic basin system, and 1 in the nodes not only in the basins but also in the nonbasin system. This means that metastases spread along the anatomic lymphatic flows in the early stage. Micrometastases of the sentinel nodes develop prior to histologic appearance, and the neighboring nonsentinel nodes are also possibly involved in the early stage. This suggests that, even in the case of cancer-free sentinel nodes, the basins should be dissected. Since 1995, we have performed lymphatic basin dissections and limited gastric resections on 159 sentinel node-negative patients. The crude survival curve was not different from that of the conventional group. The incidence of postoperative distress such as early satiety, unsatisfactory recovery of body weight dumping syndrome, duodenogastric reflux, and gallstone formation was significantly lower in the limited group than that in the conventional group.
...
PMID:[Lymphatic basin dissection and function-preserving limited gastrectomy for early-stage gastric carcinoma]. 1585 38

A 62-year-old white woman with an unremarkable past medical history presented with acute cholecystitis. A cholecystectomy was performed, revealing an acute hemorrhagic and chronic cholecystitis associated with cholelithiasis. Two months after the operation, the patient developed a massive hemoperitoneum and died by hypo-volemic shock. At autopsy, an angiosarcoma measuring 5 cm in diameter was found in the liver, at the site of the gallbladder fossa. There were multiple hepatic, splenic, ovarian and peritoneal metastases and a massive hemoperitoneum consisting of 8 L of blood and blood clots. Review of the tissue sections from the patient's gallbladder confirmed the presence of an acute hemorrhagic and chronic cholecystitis and also revealed residual foci of an angiosarcoma. A review of eight previously reported cases of gallbladder angiosarcoma is also presented.
...
PMID:Angiosarcoma of the gallbladder: case report and review of the literature. 1586 Dec 70

Clinical research into the formation of gallstones has indicated that the anatomy of the cystic duct is one of a number of factors contributing to the formation of gallstones. The cystic duct allows low-viscosity hepatic bile to enter the gallbladder under low pressure and the expulsion of a more viscous gallbladder bile, but little is known about this transport mechanism and the effect of anatomical variations in structure. This article describes the variation in geometry of the cystic duct, obtained from acrylic resin casts of the neck and first part of the cystic duct in gallbladders removed for gallstone disease and obtained from patients undergoing partial hepatectomy for metastatic disease. The data obtained allowed us to formulate a number of standard terms for describing cystic duct morphology and demonstrate that the term "spiral valve" is only partially correct when describing the duct anatomy. In over half of the casts, spiraling was not the dominant feature of the cystic duct. Additionally, the term valve implies active resistance to flow in one direction, whereas the internal baffles of the cystic duct would serve to regulate bile flow in both directions. These data are useful for realistic 3D modeling of fluid-structure interactions of the flow of bile in the human cystic duct.
...
PMID:Investigation of the functional three-dimensional anatomy of the human cystic duct: a single helix? 1628 91

Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND) is the most accurate method to evaluate the presence and extent of retroperitoneal nodal metastases in clinical stage I non-seminomatous germ cell testicular carcinoma. In our Department the open "nerve sparing" RPLND is already the standard surgical treatment for these tumors and laparoscopic technique is employed in surgical treatment of digestive diseases as cholelithiasis, hiatal hernias and gastrointestinal tumors; we report our first experience with laparoscopic RPLND in patients with low stage non-seminomatous germ cell testicular tumors (NSGCTT). A laparoscopic modified template RPLND was performed in 5 high-risk patients with non-seminomatous germ cell clinical stage I tumors by a transperitoneal approach. In 4 of the 5 cases a template dissection was performed. In one pathological stage II tumor a limited lymph node dissection was performed and the patient underwent postoperative chemotherapy. Mean operative time was 190 minutes (range 160-210). No retrograde ejaculation occurred. The mean number of dissected nodes was 21 (range 16-25). At mean follow-up of 16.3 months (range 12-21) the 4 operated patients with pathological stage I NSGCTT are disease free without ejaculatory or urinary dysfunction. Our preliminary experience suggests that laparoscopic RPLND for stage I NSGCTT is feasible and safe for surgeons largely trained in either laparoscopic digestive surgery or open RPLND for whom the learning curve of that minimally invasive approach is lower than expected.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy for stage I non-seminomatous testicular tumors. 1633 55

The ovary is a relatively frequent site of metastases from malignant neoplasia arising elsewhere in the body, the majority of these originating from the gastrointestinal tract. The best-known tumor of this type is signet ring cell adenocarcinoma (Krukenberg tumor) of gastric origin and large bowel. The gall bladder and bile ducts are extremely rare sources of these metastases. The casuistic describes a female patient, presented with pelvic mass and jaundice. While clinical and imaging results suggested a primary ovarian carcinoma with incidental cholelithiasis and choledocholithiasis, the final diagnosis was obtained on the basis of histopathologic findings of resected specimen.
...
PMID:A case of ovarian metastasis of gall bladder carcinoma simulating primary ovarian neoplasm: diagnostic pitfalls and review of literature. 1651 13

Surgery for cancer carries concerns of tumor dissemination related to tumor manipulation, tumor violation, and wound seeding. Minimally invasive surgery is now standard for several benign conditions, such as symptomatic cholelithiasis and surgical therapy of gastroesophageal reflux. With the minimally invasive surgery explosion of the 1990s, virtually every procedure traditionally performed via laparotomy has been performed successfully with laparoscopic methods, including pancreaticoduodenectomy for cancer. Shortly after the first descriptions of laparoscopic-assisted colectomy, reports of port-site tumor recurrences surfaced, raising concerns of usingpneumoperitoneum-based surgery for malignancy. This review covers the development of laparoscopic surgery for cancer. Historical perspectives elucidate factors that helped shape the current state of the art. Theoretical concerns are discussed regarding surgery-induced immune suppression and its potential effects on tumor recurrence with both open and laparoscopic approaches. The concerns of laparoscopic port-site wound metastases are addressed, with a critical evaluation of the literature. Finally, a technical discussion of laparoscopic-assisted resections of hepatic and pancreatic tumors details patient selection, operative approach, and existing data for these operations.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic surgery for cancer: historical, theoretical, and technical considerations. 1692 61


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>