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)

Benign liver tumors are relatively uncommon and, even when large enough to be symptomatic, they usually remain undiagnosed prior to exploratory laparotomy. Hemangiomas constitute the majority of benign hepatic neoplasms and are 9 times as frequent in females as in males. Most are asymptomatic but abdominal swelling, a mass, or symptoms due to compression of adjacent organs may occur and abdominal hemorrhage is reported in 4.5% of patients. Hepatic hemangioma may produce a large arteriovenous communication serious enough to cause heart failure. Recently an increased frequency of liver tumors, mostly adenomas, has been noted in women taking oral contraceptives (OCs); the cause has been attributed to estrogens. The exact incidence is unknown but believed to be low. It is most common in women in their late 20s who have been on OCs for 7 years or more. The tumor occasionally completely regresses on withdrawal of the OCs. The tumor may be discovered incidentally at laparotomy or may manifest inself by pain, a palpable mass, or catastrophic hemoperitoneum. Hepatic adenoma is usually a solitary lesion and infrequently degenerates into malignancy. Differential diagnosis includes chronic gall bladder disease and peptic ulcer. Focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) is apparently much less frequently related to OC use and is less likely to bleed seriously than adenoma. Hepatic chemistry is usually normal in adenoma and FNH, but slight increases in serum bilirubin, serum alkaline phosphatase, and serum transaminase may occur. Primary liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma or hepatoma) is mostly a disease of males and in the US and Western Europe seldom develops before age 40. Fibrolamellar carcinoma, which characteristically develops in adolescents and young adults, occurs with equal sex incidence. Doubt has been expressed about its relationship to OCs. In the US about 75% of primary hepatocellular carcinomas are associated with cirrhosis, and about 5% of cirrhosis cases develop primary liver cancer. Clinical manifestations of hepatoma have been divided into 5 groups: frank cancer (62.7%), acute abdominal cancer (8%), febrile cancer (8%), occult cancer (16%), and metastatic cancer (5%). Detection of large amounts of alpha fetoprotein has proven useful in diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma, but values may be negative in OC users. It has been estimated that 1/3 to 1/2 of all malignant tumors eventually metastasize to the liver.
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PMID:Hepatic neoplasia: selected clinical aspects. 619 95

Small liver hemangiomas are displayed as echogenic as well as sonolucent patterns on ultrasonic scans. Differentiation from malignomas is difficult and responsible, hepatomas and solitary metastases being possible. By partial liver resection the malignant diseases can be treated successfully. Therefore an accurate diagnosis is to be aimed at. Of all the methods only angiography can ensure a certain amount of clarity. This is possible under the following circumstances: The cavernomas must be of a certain size. They must not withdraw from evidence due to large avascular areas which can result from thrombosis, fibrosis or necrosis. Moreover a superselective filling of the hepatic artery is claimed but not always possible. If the portal vein is opacified it conceals the radiologically typical image of the cavernoma. Under these circumstances only few moments of the late arterial and the hepatovenous phases remain to detect the hemangioma in the seriogram.
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PMID:[Liver hemangioma--an angiographic contribution to the differential diagnosis of sonographic lesions (author's transl)]. 621 97

A mixed tumor of the omentum majus found at autopsy of a 28-year-old man with a huge liver tumor is described. The primary tumor was identified in the omentum majus by macroscopic, histologic and electron-=microscopic observations. The tumor was finally diagnosed as a mixed tumor which resembled a hepatoblastoma consisting of immature and embryonal types of epithelial component and of mesodermal tumor including hemangioma, osteoid and myxomatous tissues in the primary lesion. Widespread multiple metastases of the epithelial component mainly to the liver, and partially in the lungs, diaphragm and lymph nodes were noted. The levels of alpha-fetoprotein and carcinoembryonic antigen were within normal limits, but the epithelial component showed a resemblance to primitive hepatocytes. This tumor was discussed related to hepatoblastoma in an adult, with the features compatible with description of the same tumors reported previously in the literature.
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PMID:A mixed tumor of the omentum majus in an adult with discussion related to hepatoblastoma. 626 97

Supra-labyrinthic tumours usually produce lesions of the Vth and VIth cranial nerves, whereas infra-labyrinthic tumours affect the sensory-motor nerves. Both types of tumour may reveal themselves by cochleo-vestibular disorders and/or middle ear symptoms. The author has treated a series of patients with such tumours and describes the most frequent types of intrapetrosal growth: cholesteatoma (12 cases), glomic tumours (11 cases), facial nerve tumours (3 cases), metastases (2 cases). Meningiomas can also be encountered, as well as rarer tumours (4 cases), such as embryonic sarcoma, chordoma, chondroma and chondrosarcoma, cavernous angioma, eosinophilic granuloma, solitary plasmocytoma and fibrous dysplasia of the petrous bone. Some signal symptoms (sudden deafness, mucous otitis media, paralysis of vocal cords) can be particularly misleading.
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PMID:[Signal symptoms in tumours of the petrous bone (author's transl)]. 627 61

Major hepatic resections were performed on 138 patients for a variety of conditions. There was one intraoperative death. Including this patient, there were 15 deaths within 30 days of the operation (operative mortality 10.9%). Important postoperative complications were intra-abdominal sepsis (17%), biliary leak (11%), hepatic failure (8%), and hemorrhage (6%). The results of 30 resections for the benign lesions, liver cell adenoma, focal nodular hyperplasia, hemangioma, and cystadenoma showed no operative mortality and low morbidity. Of 26 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, seven died within a month of operation. The cumulative survival of the 26 at five years was 38%, and of the 19 who survived the procedure, 51%. Poor survival followed resections for cholangiocarcinoma and "mixed tumors." The five-year cumulative survival of 22 patients who had colorectal metastases excised was 31%. Apart from a patient with carcinoid, prolonged survival was rare after resection of other secondaries and after en bloc resections for tumors directly invading the liver. Hepatic resection was of value in the management of some patients with hepatic trauma, Caroli's disease, liver cysts, and intrahepatic stones.
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PMID:Major hepatic resection. A 25-year experience. 629 17

The computer tomographic and angiographic findings in 53 patients with intrahepatic masses were compared. The histological findings show that 17 were due to echinococcus, 12 were due to hepatic carcinoma, ten were metastases, five patients had focal nodular hyperplasia, three an alveolar echinococcus and there were three cases with an haemangioma of the liver and a further three liver abscesses. Computer tomography proved superior in peripherally situated lesions, and in those in the left lobe of the liver. Arteriography was better at demonstrating lesions below 2 cm in size, particularly vascular tumours. As a pre-operative measure, angiography is to be preferred since it is able to demonstrate anatomic anomalies and variations in the blood supply, as well as invasion of the portal vein or of the inferior vena cava.
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PMID:[Computer tomographic and angiographic studies of histologically confirmed intrahepatic masses (author's transl)]. 645 Jan 27

Central neurological pathology in the course of puerperium was studied in 105 observations. One could distinguish: --meeting pathology (tumoral, metabolic, infectious processes) 12 cases, --cerebral vascular accidents (arterial, venous...) 30 cases, These two groups corresponded to a pathology without any obvious connection with gravidic toxemia. --eclamptic or not eclamptic toxemia with encephalopathy: 21 cases, --finally, toxemia associated to or complicated with focused neurological syndromes: 42 cases. Concerning cerebral vascular accidents, one could verify the importance of hemorrhagical accidents (13 cases: 3 subdurhematoma, 4 sub-arachnoid hemorrhages, 6 intra-cerebral hematoma (2 of them corresponded to previous affections revealed by the hemorrhage) (angioma, chorioepithelioma, metastases) and thrombo-embolic accidents (16 cases) corresponding especially to arterial thromboses, the frequency of which seems more important than the frequency of venous thromboses. Any generalized or focused central neurological accident sets the problem of toxemia but is not obligatory toxemic. An associated disorder of hemostasis (hypercoagulability, consumption coagulopathy) has to be searched for.
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PMID:[Acute central neurologic complications and the pregnancy-puerperal status. 105 cases in an intensive care unit. Contribution to the study of the relation between pregnancy toxemia and cerebral vascular accidents]. 665 Oct 76

The authors review the symptomatology of splenic tumor pathologies in connection with 93 personal observations (71 non-Hodgkin lymphomas, 12 Hodgkin's disease, 6 metastases, 3 epidermoid cysts, 1 angioma). Nodular forms were observed in 31.2% of the cases reviewed. In most cases of lymphoma, the ultrasonographic finding was a homogeneous splenomegaly. The possibility of false negatives for splenic involvement in lymphomas when spleen volume is normal has led certain authors to suggest fine needle puncture of the spleen under ultrasonographic guidance. Such procedures are unnecessary if ultrasonography has detected an obvious lesion such as multinodular involvement of homogeneous splenomegaly. However, this moderately traumatic technique can provide valuable information until such time as ultrasonic tissue characterization has proven itself in vivo.
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PMID:[Echography in tumor pathology of the spleen: limitations and perspectives]. 666 34

Seventy one patients with renal tumors treated at our clinic during the 11 years from 1970 to 1980 were clinically examined. The results are summarized as follows. The frequency of patients with renal tumors was 0.22% of the outpatients and 1.72% of the inpatients. Of the 71 renal tumors, 41 were renal adenocarcinoma, and 26 were renal pelvic tumors of which 23 were transitional cell tumors, 2 were squamous cell tumors, and 1 was adenocarcinoma. The other tumors were 1 adenoma, 1 hemangioma, 1 hematoma, and 1 foreign body granuloma. The right and left kidneys were affected at equal frequencies. Male patients were more commonly affected, the sex ratio being 39 to 32. The youngest case was a 29-year-old female, and the eldest was a 84-year-old male. As the initial symptoms and chief complaints, gross hematuria was most frequent (52 cases, 73.2%), followed abdominal tumor mass (32 cases, 45.1%), and fever (26 cases, 36.6%). Only 2 cases showed the classic triad, while 1 case had none of them. The period between onset of symptoms and admission, was within 1 year for all patients except for 2 cases. Metastasis was found in 52 cases. The lung was the most frequent site of metastasis (12 cases, 23.1%), followed by lymphnodes, bones, and liver. The clinical examinations performed and diagnostic techniques used were, renal function (BUN, Serum Cr), Hb, WBC, liver function (T. Bil, GOT, GPT), serum protein fraction, serum LDH, serum Ca, ESR, tumor marker (AFP, CEA), urine cytological examination, blood pressure, IVP (or RP), angiography. As the therapeutic method, nephrectomy was performed in 25 cases (35.2%), combined nephrectomy and irradiation therapy in 12 cases (16.9%), combined nephrectomy and chemotherapy in 11 cases (15.5%), combined nephrectomy and other therapy in 15 cases (21.1%), and conservative therapy in 8 cases (11.3%). For the entire traced series of renal tumors, the 1-, 3-and 5-year survival rates were 72.3, 49.8, and 49.8% respectively. For renal parenchymal tumors (renal adenocarcinoma), the 1-, 3-and 5-year survival rates were 77.8, 53.0, and 53.0%. The most important factor of prognosis was the stage of tumor. Patients with elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and dysproteinemia also had distinctly unfavorable prognosis. In this study of therapy, the highest survival rate was seen for the patients treated by combined nephrectomy and irradiation therapy of both renal parenchymal and pelvic tumors.
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PMID:[A clinical study of renal tumors]. 668

Trauma to a hepatic haemangioma from a fine needle biopsy has not yet been reported and the theoretical high risk with 22-23 g needles in patients with this lesion tends to be minimised. Through misdiagnosis biopsy was ordered in one case of cystic haemolymphangioma of the liver in a patient being checked by ultrasonography for possible metastases. Aspiration was complicated by a massive peritoneal lymphorrhoea, which regressed completely in 15 days. The mechanics of the event and its possible effect on the pre-existing liver failure, held to be the direct cause of death three months later, is a matter of hypothesis.
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PMID:Massive lymphorrhoea after fine needle biopsy of the cystic haemolymphangioma of the liver. 673 6


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