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)

Primary germinoma of the central nervous system carries a good prognosis because of their radiosensitivity. Recurrence is rare and extraneural metastases are even more unusual. We report a unique case of a primary intracranial germinoma exhibiting complete response to radiotherapy, but recurring as an intra-abdominal yolk sac tumor. The presence of a VP shunt is thought to have facilitated metastatic spread of the intracranial neoplasm. An 21-year-old (corrected) male was admitted with headache and consciousness disturbance. Computed tomography (CT) revealed an enhanced tumor of the pineal region and hydrocephalus. A ventriculo-peritoneal shunt was emplaced immediately. No serum tumor markers such as alpha-fetoprotein or human chorionic gonadotropin were detectable. A test dose of radiotherapy (whole brain 20Gy) was given. The tumor size was remarkably decreased. Clinical diagnosis was germinoma. Additional whole brain radiation (total 45Gy) and whole spine radiation (20Gy) were given. The tumor and the hydrocephalus regressed completely and the patient returned to school. Three years later, he experienced a feeling of abdominal fullness. CT and echotomography of the abdomen showed a large peritoneal and intra-hepatic tumor. But MRI revealed no recurrent tumor of the pineal lesion or of the other areas in the central nervous system. Radiological and clinical findings showed no tumors in the testis, the retroperitoneal cavity, or the thymus. Laboratory investigation demonstrated elevated serum AFP (26,550 ng/ml). AFP level regressed after combined chemotherapy. However, the patient died due to pneumonia and multiple organ failure. Only needle necropsy was performed. The microscopic appearance of the peritoneal tumor was confirmed to be an endodermal sinus tumor. It was suspected to be a metastasis of the pineal tumor through the V-P shunt system.
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PMID:[Extraneural metastasis of pineal germinoma through a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, following histological change]. 1019 Jan 63

Papillary thyroid carcinoma has a low incidence of distant metastases. Brain metastasis is extremely rare with a frequency of 0.1-1.3%. In the present series, the rate was 1.5%, only two cases had cerebral metastases in 136 patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma from January 1988 to April 1998. Cerebellar metastasis is even rarer, and solitary cerebellar metastasis has not been reported to the best of our knowledge. Two cases of papillary thyroid carcinoma with cerebellar metastases presenting as tumor hemorrhage are reported. In one patient, the lesion was in the bilateral cerebellar hemispheres with obstructive hydrocephalus. After operation, the patient had an uneventful course with recovery of her consciousness. In the other, the solitary lesion was in the left cerebellar hemisphere without obstructive hydrocephalus. After surgical treatment, the patient had a smooth course with resolution of his neurological deficit. It shows the importance of surgery in the management of a hemorrhagic cerebellar metastasis from papillary thyroid carcinoma, not only in reducing acute aggravating cerebral symptoms, but also in prolonging survival time.
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PMID:Hemorrhagic cerebellar metastasis from papillary thyroid carcinoma. 1033 Aug 3

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.
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PMID:[An unusual form of neurosarcoidosis isolated in association with a tumoral lesion, chronic meningitis, hydrocephalus and hypothalamo-hypophyseal involvement]. 1056 66

Glioblastoma multiforme is one of the commonest primary malignant tumours of the brain with rare incidence of extracranial metastases. Systemic dissemination via the CSF or CSF diversionary shunt procedures is also rare. The reported 9-year-old child was a case of thalamic glioblastoma with hydrocephalus who underwent biventriculoperitoneal shunting before tumour decompression and radiotherapy. The child developed incapacitating ascites 8 months following surgical decompression and 9 months after the shunt diversion which was found to be caused by CSF dissemination of the glioblastoma via the ventriculoperitoneal shunt. The child ultimately succumbed to his disease.
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PMID:Thalamic glioblastoma with cerebrospinal fluid dissemination in the peritoneal cavity. 1068 78

The management of single brain metastases has evolved substantially over the last decade. The advent of triple-dose contrast-enhanced MRI scans has improved the radiologists' capacity to resolve small tumors, and, thereby, has resulted in a declining percentage of brain metastases classified as single. Only 25% to 30% of brain metastases are single; single brain metastases in the absence of systemic metastases are termed solitary. Randomized trials suggest that patients not in imminent danger of herniation are best managed initially with dexamethasone 2 to 4 mg administered orally twice daily. The routine use of prophylactic anticonvulsants is discouraged. Patients with refractory progressive systemic tumor likely to prove fatal within 3 to 6 months should receive fractionated whole brain radiotherapy. Patients with highly radiosensitive primary tumors such as small cell lung cancer, lymphoma, and germinoma should also receive whole brain radiotherapy. Patients with inactive or controllable systemic cancer and good performance status benefit from the addition of local strategies like surgery or radiosurgery to whole brain radiotherapy. Although surgery and radiosurgery have not been compared in a randomized controlled trial, data suggest that results are similar. Consequently, for most metastases that fall within the size constraints of radiosurgery (3.5 cm or smaller in diameter), radiosurgery is preferred for its relatively noninvasive nature. Patients with larger or cystic tumors, with obstructive hydrocephalus, or neurologic instability despite corticosteroids are best treated with craniotomy. Fractionated whole brain radiation following surgical or radiosurgical management of single brain metastasis appears to decrease the risk of recurrent brain metastasis, although it has not been shown to improve survival. We recommend its use in most patients, although patients with tumors likely to be highly resistant to fractionated radiotherapy or at high risk of radiation neurotoxicity may reasonably defer its use.
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PMID:Single Brain Metastasis. 1112 62

The study was undertaken to develop and introduce low-invasive differential endoneurosurgical correction of spinal fluid circulatory disorders in tumors of the pineal area, posterior portions of the third ventricle and the posteranial fossa. The authors present their experience in surgically treating 12 patients by using endoscopy. Surgical techniques, endoscopic semiotics of tumors of the above site, metastases along the liquor pathways are described. The outcomes of this treatment are analyzed. An algorithm of surgical treatment is proposed. Certain advantages of endoscopic interventions over conventional treatments in the treatment of tumor-induced occlusive hydrocephalus justify their inclusion into a comprehensive examination and treatment of patients of this study group.
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PMID:[Endoscopic interventions in tumors of the pineal area, posterior regions of the III ventricle, and the posterior cranial fossa]. 1121 Apr 77

Stereotactic radiosurgery is being increasingly advocated as the primary modality for treatment of vestibular schwannomas (VS). This modality has been shown to arrest tumor growth, with few associated short-term morbidities, and with possibly better hearing and facial nerve preservation rates than microsurgery. Radiation-induced oncogenesis has long been recognized, although stereotactic radiosurgery de novo induction of a secondary tumor has never been clearly described. The authors report on a patient with a VS who did not have neurofibromatosis Type 2 and who underwent gamma knife surgery (GKS). This patient required microsurgical removal of the VS within 8 months because of development of a tumor cyst with associated brainstem compression and progressive hydrocephalus. The operation resulted in clinical stabilization and freedom from tumor recurrence. Seven and a half years after undergoing GKS, the patient presented with symptoms of raised intracranial pressure. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a new ring-enhancing lesion in the inferior temporal lobe adjacent to the area of radiosurgery, which on craniotomy was confirmed to be a glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Despite additional conventional external-beam radiation to the temporal lobe, the GBM has progressed. Whereas this first reported case of a GBM within the scatter field of GKS does not conclusively prove a direct causal link, it does fulfill all of Cahan's criteria for radiation-induced neoplasia, and demands increased vigilance for the potential long-term complications of stereotactic radiosurgery, and reporting of any similar cases.
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PMID:Glioblastoma multiforme occurring in a patient treated with gamma knife surgery. Case report and review of the literature. 1135 16

Dissemination of tumour cells along the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pathway has been reported mostly in medulloblastomas, germ cell tumours or high grade gliomas. Juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma (JPA) is usually a benign astrocytoma. However, drop metastases of indolent nature from intracranial tumours to the spinal cord are documented. All of the previously reported cases represent metastases of cerebellar or hypothalamic tumours spreading to the spinal cord. We document in this paper the first report of a spinal cord pilocytic astrocytoma spreading via the CSF to the cerebral meninges. A 9 year old girl had a JPA of C5 to C7 subtotally resected. Two and a half years later she presented with hydrocephalus with radiologically meningeal enhancement. The meninges were biopsied which showed metastatic JPA. The girl was relatively well 4 years after initial surgery with residual tumour. Spinal cord JPA can rarely metastasize to the cranial meninges. Similar to intracranial tumours which spread to the spinal cord, such metastatic lesions are indolent.
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PMID:Spinal cord pilocytic astrocytoma with cranial meningeal metastases. 1143 86

Medulloblastoma is the most frequent paediatric malignant brain tumour. The purpose of this study was to define imaging characteristics and contrast uptake patterns of primary and recurrent medulloblastoma using MRI. The MRI examinations of 17 histologically proven cases of medulloblastoma diagnosed in our institution (13 males and 4 females; mean age 13 years, 7 months) were reviewed in retrospect. Only patients with pre-treatment and follow-up examinations including T2-weighted images (fluid-attenuated inversion recovery or turbo spin echo) and T1-weighted images after contrast injection (0.1 mmol/kg Gd-DTPA) were included in this study. Whereas 6 of 7 tumours ( n=17) were hyperintense on T2-weighted images, contrast enhancement was detected in 13 patients. Fifteen tumours occurred in the cerebellar vermis, two were located in the cerebellar hemispheres. Mean size at the time of presentation was 30.1 mm. All patients presented with some extent of an occlusive hydrocephalus. Local recurrent tumour or metastases were seen in 6 patients (3 months to 7 years, mean age 2.5 years). Whereas the T2 signal intensity of recurrent tumour or subarachnoidal metastases resembled the primary neoplasms, the contrast uptake tended to be less pronounced ( n=3) or was completely absent ( n=2); thus, suggestive signs of primary medulloblastoma are location in the vermis, hyperintensity on T2-weighted images and hydrocephalus. The amount of contrast enhancement is variable and nonspecific. Secondary medulloblastoma manifestation is characterized by T2 hyperintensity but not by contrast uptake.
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PMID:MRI features of primary, secondary and metastatic medulloblastoma. 1204 37

A 47-year-old woman presented with headache and left homonymous hemianopsia. T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging with contrast medium showed a mass lesion with ring-like enhancement in the right temporo-occipital lobe. The patient underwent surgery, focal irradiation, and chemotherapy. The histological diagnosis was glioblastoma. Four months after the operation, the patient again developed headache and left homonymous hemianopsia in addition to vomiting and mild left hemiparesis. MR imaging showed recurrence of the tumor and hydrocephalus. The patient underwent a second craniotomy and placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt. Intraoperative findings revealed that the transverse-sigmoid sinus was occluded by tumor invasion. The patient died of intraventricular dissemination 2 months after the second operation. Autopsy revealed metastases in the spleen and lungs. Glioblastoma with metastases to the spleen is very rare. The prognosis for patients is poor. Excessive therapy should not be used for patients with extracranial metastases from glioblastoma.
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PMID:Glioblastoma with metastasis to the spleen--case report. 1456 Aug 51


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