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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three cases of
HIV infection
with choriocarcinoma are presented. One case had prolonged chemotherapy without remission, the second had remission only after combining hysterectomy with chemotherapy and the third who had extensively
metastatic disease
in the presence of other low risk factors are reported.
HIV infection
may predispose patients to extensive metastatic choriocarcinoma and influence the course of treatment. We propose that
HIV infection
be considered a poor prognostic risk for gestation trophoblastic neoplasias.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus in gestational trophoblastic neoplasias--is it a poor prognostic risk factor. 128 42
Double-stranded polynucleotides, which are composed of two complementary homopolyribonucleotides containing no genetic information, are synthetic molecules capable of mimicking the action of natural double-stranded RNA or viral RNA on cells. Double-stranded polyribonucleotides act as an alarm system alerting the cell to the presence of an external aggression, e.g. a viral attack. In addition, polyribonucleotides have a more active function in that they trigger cell defense processes through activation of a family of genes, of which some encode cytokines, activation of cytoplasmic enzymes involved in antiviral mechanisms or signal transduction, and activation of nonspecific immune responses. Double-stranded polyribonucleotides containing one mismatched base pair per helix have been found to be especially interesting. The best known example is poly(I).poly(C12U), also called ampligen. Poly(I).poly(C12U) is capable, in experimental models, of limiting the development of viruses (including
HIV
), reducing tumor growth, eliminating
metastases
, and, according to one report, preventing steady declines in T-cell counts in
HIV
-positive patients. Therapeutic doses used in the USA as an experimental drug induced little toxicity. In vitro, poly(I).poly(C12U) acts synergistically with interferon, interleukin 2 or AZT, suggesting that these latter drugs may be effective in lower, less toxic doses when used in combination with poly(I).poly(C12U). The therapeutic activity of poly(I).poly(C12U) holds promise. More extensive prospective studies of this agent are warranted.
...
PMID:[Biological actions and therapeutic perspectives of double stranded polyribonucleotides: a reappraisal]. 128 99
A new case of supratentorial malignant glioma is reported in an
HIV
-1 infected male homosexual. Tumours of the nervous system account for only 5 to 10 percent of neurological complications of AIDS, and most of them are lymphomas or
metastases
from Kaposi's sarcomas. In fact,
HIV
-1 is a neurotropic lentivirus, not transforming by definition. Our patient had a frontal tumoral syndrome resistant to the conventional anti-toxoplasmic treatment. Pathological examination of a tumoral fragment obtained by stereotactic biopsy showed that according to the WHO criteria the tumour was a glioblastoma. The mechanism through which
HIV infection
results in malignant transformation of astrocytes is conjectural. There is no consensus on whether the virus is located in glial cells, but the transgenic animal technique suggests that the tat gene might play a certain role. Other hypotheses concerning the indirect neurotoxicity of
HIV
have been put forward, notably that of viral coinfection with viruses of the papova group.
...
PMID:[Cerebral glioblastoma: a new complication of HIV-1 infection]. 132 36
HIV
-1-related neurological diseases, excluding opportunistic infections and HIV encephalitis, are considered here. Most occur in severely immunosuppressed patients, with CD4 counts of under 200 x 10(6) l-1. Primary brain lymphoma and
metastases
from systemic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the second commonest cause of cerebral mass lesions in AIDS, are usually aggressive B cell tumours. Their poor median survival after treatment, compared with that of lymphomas in non-AIDS patients, seems related to systemic complications, particularly opportunistic infections. Kaposi's sarcoma produces neurological symptoms exceptionally. Cerebral infarction is often unrecognized clinically but large vessel arteritic occlusions may occur. Intracranial haemorrhages occur mostly in thrombocytopenic patients. Seizures are frequently referred to the neurologist; investigation may lead to a diagnosis of AIDS. Nearly 50% of patients with seizures have cerebral toxoplasmosis or cryptococcal meningitis;
HIV
-1 encephalitis is presumed to be the cause in 30%. A subacute or chronic vacuolar myelopathy with pyramidal and posterior column signs is the commonest form of spinal cord involvement in AIDS; its cause remains unknown. Peripheral nerve syndromes occur at all stages of
HIV
-1 infection. Distal symmetrical peripheral neuropathies are the most frequent, particularly a painful form with axonal atrophy, associated with CMV infection, and seen during ARC or AIDS. Mononeuritis multiplex due to vasculitis, CMV, or lymphoma and a serious lumbosacral polyradiculopathy due to CMV are infrequent. The commonest myopathy is due to zidovudine (AZT); it usually responds to drug withdrawal. The nature, prognosis and optimal management of most other myopathies is yet to be determined.
...
PMID:Other neurological diseases in HIV-1 infection: clinical aspects. 134 49
Radiologists are frequently asked to evaluate cervical lymph nodes with CT or MR imaging to determine if
metastases
are present, how extensive the
metastases
are, and if they have spread from lymph nodes to critical adjacent structures such as the carotid artery and skull base. Accurate information of this type is essential if the most appropriate treatment is to be selected. The purpose of this report is to review the diagnostic criteria that are currently used with CT and MR imaging to diagnose
metastases
in cervical nodes by evaluating nodal size, shape, grouping, and necrosis and extranodal tumor spread. In addition, emphasis is placed on details that should be included in the CT and MR report, such as the location of the nodes, the presence of nodal calcification, and the presence of associated diseases such as parotid cysts that may suggest a specific diagnosis like
HIV infection
. Because optimal treatment planning depends on the combined information gleaned from the clinical evaluation and the imaging studies, it is essential that there be a close dialogue between clinicians and radiologists.
...
PMID:Detection of metastasis in cervical lymph nodes: CT and MR criteria and differential diagnosis. 156 97
Thoracic disease in the
HIV
negative immunocompromised host is most frequently caused by infection. Patterns of involvement produced on the chest radiograph include (1) lobar or segmental consolidation, (2) nodules with rapid growth and/or cavitation, and (3) diffuse lung disease. The lung also may be directly involved by lymphoma,
metastases
, drug reactions, radiation pneumonitis, or nonspecific interstitial pneumonitis. The lung is a frequent target organ for opportunistic infections in AIDS patients, particularly of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and tuberculosis. Computed tomography may be particularly helpful in these patients in the detection of early disease and in the characterization of patterns and extent of involvement as well as complications.
...
PMID:Thoracic disease in the immunocompromised patient. 157 Mar 94
High-grade non-Hodgkins B-cell lymphoma is one of the principle malignancies that occurs in individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (
HIV
-1). Immunoblastic lymphomas that arise in immunosuppressed transplant patients have been described as both monoclonal and polyclonal, and occur in association with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. To test whether polyclonal lymphoma occurred in patients with AIDS we studied tumors from multiple sites in three patients who died with widespread AIDS-associated large cell or large cell immunoblastic lymphoma. All biopsy specimens contained invasive lymphoma. Tumor cells were mature IgM-positive immunoblasts by immunohistochemical analysis, with the same B-cell phenotype observed in all tumor sites. Only a minority of sites from all patients analyzed were monoclonal as measured by immunoglobulin gene rearrangements, with one case having several foci of monoclonal disease with other histologically identical
metastases
showing no evidence of monoclonal proliferation. Similar to the transplant-associated polyclonal B-cell proliferations. EBV gene sequences were present in multiple sites from one autopsy. In the other two autopsies, polyclonal B-cell proliferations occurred in the absence of EBV involvement except at one site, where a minor clone of EBV-infected cells was found. In contrast to
HIV
-associated Burkitt's lymphoma, no c-myc rearrangements were found at any site. These studies describe the occurrence of polyclonal lymphoma in AIDS and suggest that EBV-negative polyclonal lymphoma may be a distinct disease entity unique to
HIV
-infected individuals.
...
PMID:AIDS-associated polyclonal lymphoma: identification of a new HIV-associated disease process. 184 89
The central nervous system of nearly every
HIV
-positive patient becomes affected by the AIDS virus itself or by one of the associated diseases during the course of the illness. Early diagnosis of lesions which demand therapeutic consequences is of the most importance concerning prolongation of life and improvement in its quality. In spite of the frequent underestimation of cerebral involvement by imaging methods and their unspecific findings they are often the only diagnostic means which permit-timely diagnosis and, at least in some diseases, therapeutic monitoring. Indications for cranial computed tomography (CCT) or magnetic resonance tomography (MRT) are already present with mild or transient neurological or psychiatric symptoms or the extracerebral manifestation of neurotropic organisms or tumours which
metastasize
to the brain, even in patients without subjective complaints.
...
PMID:[AIDS of the central nervous system]. 240 43
The computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of a case of a large rapidly progressive invasive carcinoma of the cervix in an
HIV
-positive women are presented. It produced retroperitoneal and lymph node
metastases
that were large, necrotic and rapidly growing. These findings are now recognized as being diagnostic of AIDS.
...
PMID:Case report: HIV-related rapidly progressive carcinoma of the cervix AIDS--CT and MRI findings. 782 2
When the body's defences are breached by infection, information about such an event is channelled through the lymphatic system to the lymphoid organs in which immune responses occur. The key participants in these responses are lymphocytes, which populate the lymph nodes, spleen, and mucosal lymphoid tissues. Together with other cells, they form an architecture and cell network that enables coordinated function. The lymph nodes, which are usually superficial, are easily accessible and therefore frequently sampled by clinicians. The findings on such samples are invaluable in the diagnosis, staging, treatment and prognosis of disease. From the 28,895 histology specimens submitted to the Histopathology unit in Harare, Zimbabwe in the period January 1988 to June 1990, we have selected and reviewed all lymph node biopsy reports. The commonest diseases in the 2194 lymph node specimens submitted were: (a) non specific hyperplasia (33%); (b) tuberculous lymphadenitis (26.7%); (c)
metastases
(12.4%); (d) Kaposi's sarcoma (9%); (e) lymphomas (7%). The trends for nodal tuberculosis (including hyporeactive tuberculous lymphadenitis), Kaposi's sarcoma, florid follicular hyperplasia and lymphomas are discussed in the context of the increased incidence of
HIV
-related lymphoadenopathy.
...
PMID:Lymph node pathology in Zimbabwe: a review of 2194 specimens. 810 37
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