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)

Intestinal intussusception caused by metastatic tumors is a very rare condition. Preoperative diagnosis is not easy because of the condition's rarity and because of mild abdominal physical presentation. We report on a patient with osteosarcoma who suffered from abdominal pain and emesis during the period of autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. He had undergone tumor excision and radiotherapy several times prior to autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation because of multiple metastases. Intestinal metastasis was suspected initially by computed tomographic scan and sonogram and was proved by surgical resection and pathological findings. Clinicians caring for pediatric patients with osteosarcoma with a history of multiple metastases should consider the possibility of intestinal metastases when equivocal abdominal symptoms develop after intensive chemotherapy.
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PMID:Intestinal metastasis causing intussusception in a patient treated for osteosarcoma with history of multiple metastases: a case report. 1138 64

Small intestinal neoplasms are uncommonly encountered in clinical practice. They may occur sporadically, in association with genetic diseases (e.g., familial adenomatous polyposis coli or Peutz-Jeghers syndrome), or in association with chronic intestinal inflammatory disorders (e.g., Crohn's disease or celiac sprue). Benign small intestinal tumors (e.g., leiomyoma, lipoma, hamartoma, or desmoid tumor) usually are asymptomatic but may present with intussusception. Primary malignancies of the small intestine-including adenocarcinoma, leiomyosarcoma, carcinoid, and lymphoma-may present with intestinal obstruction, jaundice, bleeding, or pain. Extraintestinal neoplasms may involve the intestine via contiguous spread or peritoneal metastasis. Hematogenous metastases to the intestine from an extraintestinal primary are unusual and are most typical of melanoma. Because the small intestine is relatively inaccessible to routine endoscopy, diagnosis of small intestinal neoplasms is often delayed for months after onset of symptoms. When the diagnosis is suspected, enteroclysis is the most useful imaging study. Small bowel endoscopy (enteroscopy) is increasingly widely available and may permit earlier, nonoperative diagnosis.
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PMID:Small intestinal neoplasms. 1158 39

Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma in the appendix is uncommon. An anomaly in the rotation of the intestine is also uncommon in adults. We herein report a case of mucinous cystadenocarcinoma in the appendix in a patient with nonrotation. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of appendiceal carcinoma in a patient with an anomaly of intestinal rotation. A 76-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with left low abdominal pain. Physical examination revealed tenderness with muscle rigidity in the left lower quadrant. The patient was diagnosed to have intussusception by computed tomography and ultrasonography. An emergency operation showed nonrotation and the top of the appendix situated in the left iliac fossa. An appendectomy was performed because of gangrenous acute appendicitis. However, the cut surface of the appendix showed a mucocele measuring 4 x 4 cm in size. It was diagnosed to be mucinous cystadenocarcinoma histopathologically. A right hemicolectomy with lymph node dissection was performed, and no remaining cancer cells or lymph node metastases were found in the resected specimen pathologically. The patient had an uneventful postoperative course. No signs of recurrence have been observed for 23 months since her last operation.
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PMID:Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma in the appendix in a patient with nonrotation: report of a case. 1176 72

Primary malignant melanoma of the lung (PMML) is an uncommon tumor with very few cases reported in the literature that satisfy the required criteria to establish a primary bronchial origin. We report a case of a 44-year-old man with acute abdominal distress and a right pulmonary roentgenographic opacity. A cranial-thoracic-abdominal CT scan confirmed the presence of a pulmonary nodule with bilateral cerebral metastases and marked dilatation of intestinal loops. At laparotomy an ileal intussusception was noted and an ileal resection was done. The resected intestinal segment contained three endoluminal polypoidal formations. Histological and immunohistochemical analyses showed the presence of multiple sites of melanoma. These lesions as well as the brain lesions clearly appeared metastatic. The patient underwent further evaluation to identify a primary site of melanoma; bronchoscopy was performed with biopsy of the pulmonary nodule. Pathology revealed a neoplastic process of fusiform cells, with focal presence of melanic inter- and extracellular pigment. The immunohistochemical analysis confirmed the diagnosis of PMML. We discuss the criteria for diagnosis and histogenesis of PMML along with this unusual presentation.
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PMID:Ileal intussusception due to intestinal metastases from primary malignant melanoma of the lung. 1195 50

The Authors report on a case of multiple metastases located in the jejunum (where it caused intussusception), the omentum, and retroperitoneum having originated from a malignant melanoma with subungual primary site on first finger of left hand. After thoroughly surveying the specific literature, the Authors deal in more detail with current treatments and therapeutic prospects for this kind of neoplastic disease.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal metastasis of melanoma: a case study]. 1274 76

Osteosarcoma is the most common malignant bone neoplasm. It has a very high metastatic potential, and lungs are the most common site of metastasis followed by bones. Multiagent chemotherapy has been reported to alter the biological behavior of the disease so that the tumor metastasizes to more rare sites such as brain, bowel, and soft tissues. The authors report a case of jejuno-jejunal intussusception caused by metastases from osteosarcoma.
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PMID:Metastatic osteosarcoma causing intussusception. 1457 92

The small and large intestines are the most common sites for metastases from cutaneous malignant melanoma. However, primary melanomas in these sites are exceedingly rare. There are several case reports of patients with primary melanoma of the small bowel, but finding of a solitary primary melanoma in the colon is exceedingly rare. We describe a patient that was operated on for bowel obstruction due to colonic intussusception resulting from a right colonic tumor. Histopathological examination confirmed a diagnosis of malignant melanoma. A thorough postoperative investigation did not reveal a primary lesion in any other site. Two years after surgery, there was no evidence for recurrent disease. The treatment and prognosis of metastatic and primary melanoma of the gastrointestinal tract is discussed as well as the embryonic base for development of primary malignant melanoma of the intestine. Primary malignant melanoma of the intestine is an extremely rare lesion that may arise in the large bowel as well. It must be differentiated from other intestinal tumors and mandates a thorough investigation to rule out the possibility of being a metastasis from another more common primary site.
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PMID:Primary malignant melanoma of the right colon. 1527 92

Liposarcomas are the most prevalent soft tissue sarcomas in adults. Low-grade liposarcomas are the most frequent and least aggressive and are noted as having a low risk of metastasis. We present a case of low-grade myxoid liposarcoma that metastasized to the small bowel resulting in intussusception. This case involves a 44-year-old woman with a recurrent retroperitoneal liposarcoma. Approximately 30 months after initial diagnosis, the patient was found to have a solitary metastasis to the small bowel that presented as a jejunal intussusception. Interestingly, there was no indication of a round cell component in either the metastasis or recurrent tumor, although the original tumor did contain a small round cell component. This is the first report in the English literature of liposarcoma metastasizing to the small bowel. We suggest that atypical presentations of liposarcoma metastases should always be considered in the management of patients with a history of liposarcoma.
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PMID:Intussusception secondary to metastasis from a low-grade retroperitoneal liposarcoma. 1548 Dec 92

Cutaneous angiosarcoma is a rare aggressive vascular tumor that occurs in elderly patients and is usually located on the head and face. Metastases often develop in the cervical lymph nodes, lungs, bone, liver and spleen. There have been no reports of ileoileal intussusception due to metastatic tumor from cutaneous angiosarcoma. We reported a case of cutaneous angiosarcoma in a 67-year-old Japanese male accompanied with ileoileal intussusception due to metastatic angiosarcoma. We assume that the metastatic tumor in the small intestine was metastasized hematogeneously from cutaneous angiosarcoma, resulting in the formation of nodules and the rapid growth of a pedunculated tumor as a forerunner of the ileoileal intessusception.
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PMID:A case of ileoileal intussusception caused by metastatic pedunculated tumor of cutaneous angiosarcoma. 1633 63

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) may metastasize to almost any organ, but it is unlikely to be a direct cause of intussusception. We report a case of double enteric intussusceptions caused by metastatic RCC in a 64-year-old man. The patient presented with intermittent abdominal pain and diarrhea 11 years after undergoing a radical nephrectomy. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) showed two enhanced masses with the "target" sign, suggesting enteric intussusceptions. We performed partial enterectomy, and histological examination confirmed that the tumors had originated from RCC. To our knowledge, this is the first report of metastases from RCC manifesting as synchronous intraluminal polypoid tumors serving as the lead points of two intussusceptions in the small intestine. Thus, the possibility of multiple tumor metastases in the small intestine, with or without intussusceptions, should be considered in patients with recurrent RCC.
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PMID:Double intussusceptions in the small intestine caused by metastatic renal cell carcinoma: report of a case. 1637 2


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