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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From 1980 to 1992 we followed 12 patients with cardiac myxomas for an average of 4.4 years (8 months-11 years). Presenting symptoms were neurological in four patients (
hemiparesis
, aphasia, visual field deficits, progressive dementia or vertigo), progressive dyspnoea in six, pulmonary embolism in one, and peripheral arterial or renal emboli in three. The diagnosis was suspected clinically in 11 patients. It was confirmed by echocardiography in ten and by thoracic CT in one. All these patients had cardiac surgery. One diagnosis was made at autopsy; the patient died unexpectedly during surgery for emboli to the leg arteries. At follow-up, two additional patients had died, one from myocardial infarction and one from rhabdomyosarcoma. Only one of the nine surviving patients had recurrent symptoms after cardiac surgery. His dementia continued to progress. The patients without new symptoms after cardiac surgery had normal MRI of the brain or residual ischaemic lesions. MRI of the patient with progressive dementia showed multiple cerebral lesions with a bright centre and a dark rim on T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo images. On CT there were many calcified lesions. CT, MR angiography and contrast angiography revealed multiple fusiform aneurysms. The rare occurrence of progressive neurological symptoms after myxoma resection with multiple cerebral lesions and aneurysms should suggest myxoma
metastases
to the brain.
...
PMID:Cardiac myxomas: a long term study. 856 32
The transference of neoplasm from the donor to the recipient is a rare but recognized complication of organ transplantation. It has been reported after kidney transplantation from cadaver donors. We report a case in which an extrathoracic tumor was transmitted by the donor heart. The donor heart was harvested from a 46-year-old local donor and immediately transplanted to a 62-year-old female recipient. While implantation was performed, a hypernephroma was detected in the multiorgan donor. The ongoing heart transplantation could not be stopped. Four weeks after operation, the patient was discharged from the hospital. During the first year after transplantation, the clinical course was uneventful. One year after operation, the patient was admitted to the hospital with symptoms of weakness and fever. A right facial
hemiparesis
occurred, and a soft tumor was palpable subcutaneously in the right supraorbital region. Histologic examination revealed a malignant tumor with characteristics identical to the donor hypernephroma. In spite of chemotherapy and radiation therapy, dramatic tumor progression occurred with multiorgan
metastases
, which led to the death of the patient 2 months after admission.
...
PMID:Transferral of extrathoracic donor neoplasm by the cardiac allograft. 956 14
We report a 36-year-old woman with right hemiplegia, anosognosia, and rapidly deteriorating course. She was well until the end of January, 1995 when she had an onset of fever, sputum, and cough. A 5 x 5 tumor was found in her left lower lobe. She was admitted to the Pulmonary Medicine on May 24, 1995 when she was 36-year-old. General physical examination was unremarkable. Bone scintigraphy revealed increased uptake in the skull, sternum, right scapula, vertebrae, right femur, and in ribs. Cranial CT scan revealed a large mass lesion in the right frontal subcortical region with central low density and peripheral high density areas, and small low density lesions in the right thalamic area and in the right posterior frontal region; ring enhancement was observed in the latter two lesions. On the second day of admission, she noted left-sided weakness which improved by corticosteroid treatment. On June 17, there was a sudden onset of left
hemiparesis
and a neurologic consultation was asked. Upon neurologic examination, she appeared somnolent but could understand verbal commands. She showed constructional apraxia, neglect of the left hemisphere, and anosognosia. Cranial nerves were unremarkable. Motor-wise, she showed flaccid left hemiplegia. Deep tendon reflexes were exaggerated on the left and the plantar response was extensor bilaterally. Nuchal stiffness was noted. Her cranial CT scan on June 17 revealed enlargement of the right frontal mass lesion. The subsequent course was complicated by DIC and progressive worsening of her consciousness. On June 18, she was comatose and pupillary light reflex was lost. She developed Cheyne-Stokes respiration and expired on that evening. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC, and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had a primary adenocarcinoma in the lung with multiple
metastases
including the brain. The fulminant terminal course was ascribed to hemorrhage within the tumor and subsequent central type of transtentorial herniation. Opinions were divided regarding the cause of hemorrhage; some participants thought hemorrhage was caused by DIC. Post-mortem examination revealed an adenocarcinoma arising at the S6 segment of the left lung with multiple organ
metastases
. In the brain, a huge hemorrhagic metastasis was found in the right frontal lobe and a non-hemorrhagic metastasis in the right thalamic region. Probably, the size of the
metastases
influenced the occurrence of hemorrhage. The direct cause of the death was transtentorial herniation.
...
PMID:[A 36-year-old woman with acute onset left hemiplegia and anosognosia]. 912 37
A 43-year-old female with a thymic carcinoma spreading to the extrathorac region is reported. She had received radiation and chemotherapy, after that thymic carcinoma was extirpated. Five months later, the patient was noticed to have a right side
hemiparesis
, following consciousness disturbance. CT and MRI revealed a left thalamic mass with a heterogenous enhancement effect. The tumor was diminished dramatically due to radiation.
Metastasis
of thymic carcinoma to the central nervous system is discussed.
...
PMID:[A case of thymic carcinoma with brain metastasis]. 938 57
From Jan. 1993 to Sept. 1995 23 patients suffering from brain metastases from renal cell carcinoma were treated with the Leksell Gamma Knife at the University of Vienna. At the time of diagnosis 13 patients had single and 10 patients presented with multiple metastatic lesions with a total of 44
metastases
in MRI scans. Median tumour volume was 5500 cmm (range 100-24000 cmm). Predominant neurological symptoms and signs were different forms of
hemiparesis
, focal and generalized seizures, cognitive deficit, headache, dizziness, ataxia and CN XII paresis. Fourteen patients received Gamma Knife Radiosurgery (GKRS) with a median dose of 22 Gy (range 8-30 Gy) at the tumour margin. Nine patients underwent a combined treatment of a radiosurgical boost with a median dose of 18 Gy (range 10-22 Gy) at the tumour margin followed by Whole Brain Radiotherapy (total dose 30 Gy/2 weeks). In 20 patients tumour volume reduction up to 30% of the primary tumour volume was found after 4 weeks, evaluated on CT or MRI. A total remission was seen in 4 cases 3 months after GKRS. We achieved a local tumour control of 96%. Rapid neurological improvement after GKRS was seen in 17 patients. The median survival time was 11 months; the one-year actual survival in this unselected group was 48%. Five long term survivors were still alive, 18 patients had subsequently died, 15 of them of general tumour progression. GKRS induces a significant tumour remission accompanied by rapid neurological improvement and therefore provides the opportunity for extended high quality survival. Neither local tumour control was improved nor CNS relapse free survival was prolonged significantly by additional WBRT.
...
PMID:Gamma-knife radiosurgery for brain metastases of renal cell carcinoma: results in 23 patients. 975 21
We report a case of a 17-year-old girl with multiple intracerebral tumors. Previously, a neurofibroma in the posterior mediastinum and neurofibromatosis had been diagnosed. She developed a spastic tetraparesis with a prominent
hemiparesis
of the right side within several weeks. On admission we found clinical signs of elevated intracranial pressure. Cranial CT and MRI scans showed multiple space-occupying intracerebral tumors, thought to be multiple meningeoma. The patient was referred to the neurosurgical department, where two of the intracerebral tumors were excised. The histological examination revealed
metastases
of a neurosarcoma.
...
PMID:Multiple intracerebral metastases of a 17-year-old girl with previously diagnosed neurofibromatosis type I. 998 38
The authors report on their experience of lesionectomies close to or in the thalamus, basal ganglia, third ventricle and in the temporal lobe. The resection itself is performed stereotactically, MRI or CT guided, either microscopically or endoscopically through a sleeve designed by one of the authors and named PAN working sleeve. Over the last four years this new minimally invasive technique has been successfully applied in 39 cases. Eighteen patients with 11 astrocytoma (6AA, 5All), 5 cavernoma and 2
metastases
(melanoma, adenocarcinoma) of the basal ganglion-thalamus area and the trigonum were resected by means of a frontal or an occipital burr-hole, whereby in some cases there were subtotal resections. With four of these patients an existing
hemiparesis
increased by one degree (according to the proposal of the British Medical Research Council I-V). Seventeen patients with lesions in the foramen Monroi and in the third ventricle also underwent operation by means of frontal access, and in each case there was a total resection. Two of the patients required a shunt due to a persistent hydrocephalus internus. In one of these cases there was intraventricular bleeding which necessitated an intra-operative craniotomy. Four patients with intractable epilepsy were operated through a burr-hole in the anterior area of the os zygomaticum. Three patients were submitted to a selective resection of mesial structures and one to an anterior temporal lobe resection. To date the four patients have had no further seizures and no deficits have been observed.
...
PMID:Minimally invasive lesionectomies through a stereotactically guided working sleeve. 1004 56
Stereotactic radiosurgery (SR) is being used with increasing frequency in the treatment of brain metastases. This study provides data from a clinical experience with radiosurgery in the treatment of cases with multiple
metastases
and identifies parameters that may be useful in the proper selection and therapy of these patients. From January 1993 to April 1997, 97 patients (43 women and 54 men; median age 58 years) suffering from multiple brain metastases (median 3; range 2-4) in MRI scans, received SR with the Gamma Knife. The median dose at the tumor margin was 20 Gy (range 17-30 Gy). Median tumor volume was 3900 cmm (range 100-10,000). Different forms of
hemiparesis
, focal and generalized seizures, cognitive deficit, headache, dizziness and ataxia had been the predominant neurological symptoms. Major histologies included lung carcinoma (44%), breast cancer (21%), renal cell carcinoma (10%), colorectal cancer (8%), and melanoma (7%). The median survival time was 6 months after SR. The actual one-year survival rate was 26%. In univariate and multivariate analysis, a higher Karnofsky performance rating and absence of extracranial
metastases
had a significantly positive effect on survival. Local tumor control was achieved in 94% of the patients. Complications included the onset of peritumoral edema (n = 5) and necrosis (n = 1). SR induces a significant tumor remission accompanied by neurological improvement and, therefore, provides the opportunity for prolonged high quality survival. We conclude that radiosurgical treatment of multiple brain metastases leads to an equivalent rate of survival when compared to the historic experience of patients treated with whole brain radiotherapy. Patients presenting initially with a higher Karnofsky performance rating and without extracranial
metastases
had a median survival time of nine months. Each such case should therefore be evaluated based on these factors to determine an optimal treatment regimen.
...
PMID:Prognostic factor analysis for multiple brain metastases after gamma knife radiosurgery: results in 97 patients. 1042 Oct 75
A 30-year-old woman developed progressive left sided
hemiparesis
with intracranial hypertension signs. CT scan and MRI showed a large temporo parietal cystic mass with marked surrounding edema. Surgical excision was performed, and histological analysis revealed an inflammatory granuloma. No disease elsewhere was found and all classical causes of granulomas such as tuberculosis, toxoplasma, fungus infections, inflammatory diseases, lymphomas and cancers were excluded. No treatment was administered and she remained neurologically stable for two years. Afterwards, she developed chronic meningo-encephalitis, hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction and hydrocephalus requiring decompression. Sarcoidosis was suspected, a steroid therapy was initiated, she gradually improved and a ventricular biopsy confirmed this diagnosis. Nervous system lesions complicate the course of sarcoidosis in 5 to 15% of patients and most commonly involve the cranial and peripheral nerves. CNS involvement is typically meningeal with a predilection for the hypothalamic region. Intracranial mass lesions are rare and their occurrence in the absence of disease elsewhere is still more unusual. Three presentations have been described: an isolated intra parenchymatous mass, multiples nodules, and subdural plaques, that can be mistaken for meningiomas, gliomas or
metastases
. When systemic manifestations of sarcoidosis are absent, the diagnosis is difficult, and Gd-enhanced MRI is now considered the diagnostic method of choice. However brain biopsy is sometimes necessary. Corticosteroids are the mainstay of therapy. Immunosuppressive agents are also used and brain irradiation has been tried in some refractory cases. Surgical approach may be indicated to establish tissue diagnosis, to perform decompression and to remove brain tumors.
...
PMID:[An unusual form of neurosarcoidosis isolated in association with a tumoral lesion, chronic meningitis, hydrocephalus and hypothalamo-hypophyseal involvement]. 1056 66
We report a case of dural metastasis, detailing the neuroradiologic and therapeutic aspects. The clinical presentation was limited to a progressive left
hemiparesis
. Post-contrast CT scan revealed a heterogeneous high-density mass of the right fronto-parietal convexity. MRI demonstrated dural involvement mimicking meningioma. Chest X-ray showed a right lung opacity, suggesting the diagnosis of dural metastasis. Surgical resection was performed. Histology confirmed the diagnosis of dural metastasis from a poorly differentiated carcinoma. Treatment was completed with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Dural
metastases
are rarely reported. A review of the literature revealed principally 2 radiological aspects: hemorrhagic effusion and tumor mass. The pathophysiology of dural
metastases
is still a subject of debate. Two mechanisms have been put forward involving venous and arterial dissemination. As radiological aspects are confusing, the diagnosis of dural metastasis should be evoked in patients with spontaneous hemorrhagic subdural effusion or a tumor mass involving the dura mater.
...
PMID:[Dural metastases mimicking meningioma. Report of a case]. 1056 68
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