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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Presentation of a case of disseminated intravascular coagulation with micro-angiopathic hemolytic anemia, associated with a micro-carcinoma of the prostate. In the absence of other etiology it is postulated that the carcinoma was responsible for the hematological disturbance in spite of its small size andlack of either
metastases
or mucin secretion. The unusual discovery in this disease of bony necroses of the vertebrae, which are attributed to
ischemia
following micro-thromboses, is also discussed.
...
PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation with microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and bone necrosis associated with a prostatic microcarcinoma]. 70 6
Many small bowel abnormalities selectively involve the mesenteric or antimesenteric borders of small intestinal loops solely or predominantly. This report documents the roentgen localization and diagnosis of a variety of intraabdominal disease states by their effects specifically on the mesenteric or antimesenteric margins of small bowel loops. The conditions with selective or predominant involvement of either the mesenteric or antimesenteric borders include diverticulosis, Meckel's diverticulum, intestinal duplication, seeded
metastases
, hematogenous
metastases
, regional enteritis, lymphoma, and intestinal
ischemia
and intramural bleeding.
...
PMID:Clinical involvement of mesenteric and antimesenteric borders of small bowel loops. II. Radiologic interpretation of pathologic alterations. 82 5
Hepatic arterial chemoembolization (CE) with a mixture of particulate collagen and chemotherapeutic agents was evaluated as therapy for hepatic
metastases
from colorectal carcinoma. This article describes the characteristics sequential pattern of change seen on liver CT scans following CE. Thirty CT scans were performed on seven patients who had undergone a total of 11 CE procedures. All patients had baseline, immediate postprocedural, and follow-up CT exams at 1 to 2 month intervals following CE. Immediate post-procedural CT scans mapped the area of embolization owing to the density of the contrast mixed with the CE agents. Some lesions seen easily on baseline were more difficult to see as they became isodense with normal liver. Reflux of embolic material into the cystic artery and gallbladder wall was also observed on postprocedural scans in three patients. In all patients, early follow-up scans (1 month after CE) demonstrated changes in lesions seen on baseline scans consistent with tumor necrosis. This was corroborated by a decrease in carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels. In three patients, however, low attenuation regions developed in areas in which there had been no lesion before. The significance of these is uncertain, but the low CEA values and the subsequent evolution in appearance of these sites on CT suggest that they were regions of hepatic
ischemia
/infarction as opposed to heretofore unidentifiable
metastases
, now "unmasked." Intermediate follow-up scans (2-3 months) revealed maximal effect on tumor volume, with a decrease of > or = 25% in five of seven patients (71%). Late follow-up scans (> or = 3 months after the last CE) confirmed recurrent disease and new lesions in all cases.
...
PMID:CT findings after hepatic chemoembolization. 143 Apr 41
Repeated hepatic dearterialization combined with intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy was performed in 29 patients with unresectable primary or secondary cancer of the liver. Partial Response (PR) was obtained in 4 cases (1 hepatocellular carcinoma and 3 gastric secondaries), when evaluated by measuring the regression rate radiologically. The most remarkable effect was found in those with
metastases
from gastric cancer. A satisfactory result was not obtained for hepatocellular carcinoma with liver cirrhosis because of frequent associated complications. A strategy to modulate the resistance of tumors to
ischemia
and anticancer drugs should be considered in order to obtain a better clinical result by this method.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of repeated hepatic dearterialization combined with intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy of unresectable primary or secondary cancer of the liver]. 153 Mar 50
The clinical experience following transplantation of livers obtained from non-heart-beating cadaver donors (NHBD) with the use of core cooling method is presented here. Six livers procured from such cadavers were transplanted into 6 recipients with hepatoma involving right and left lobes but without distant
metastases
. The first liver subjected to 75 minutes of warm
ischemia
had insufficient function after transplantation. The recipient died of graft failure 54 days later. The other 5 livers with 32 to 45 minutes of warm
ischemia
had a good or excellent immediate function. These 5 recipients died of tumor recurrence, acute rejection or septicemia 131 to 261 days after transplantation. The utilization of selected NHBD is suggested by our practice as a possible approach to help alleviate the acute organ shortage in the areas where heart-beating cadaver donors of brain death are not available.
...
PMID:The results of transplant livers from selected non-heart-beating cadaver donors. 166 89
The novel tissue-specific contrast agent, Gd-BOPTA/Dimeg, was tested in MR imaging of experimental focal liver disease and of acute myocardial ischemia in rats. Directly implanted liver tumors and blood-borne
metastases
were used as models for focal liver disease and occlusion of the lower anterior descending coronary artery as model for acute
ischemia
. The studies with implanted tumors, at a dose level of 250 mumol/kg, showed a very high (370%) and persistent (greater than 2 h) increase in the tumor-liver contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), owing to selective enhancement of normal liver parenchyma signal intensity. While all blood-borne
metastases
showed a similar late CNR enhancement, some of them experienced early contrast loss due to transient signal intensity enhancement. In myocardial imaging, Gd-BOPTA/Dimeg produced a signal intensity enhancement in normal myocardium and an injured area-normal area CNR enhancement which were both much stronger and more persistent than those produced by Gd-DTPA/Dimeg.
...
PMID:Gd-BOPTA/Dimeg: experimental disease imaging. 181 66
In recent years, wide agreement has been expressed on the value of surgical resection for liver metastases from colorectal cancer, while for unresectable patients different types of locoregional treatment have been attempted. One hundred seventy-one patients with hepatic
metastases
from colorectal cancer were treated by us over a period of 15 years. Sixty-four underwent hepatic resection, and 107 underwent various forms of locoregional treatment. Our experience confirms the opinion that hepatic resection can be performed with a "curative" aim in patients with colorectal liver metastases: a 5-year survival rate can be achieved in about 30% of resectable cases. Adjuvant chemotherapy after hepatic resection should be tested in prospective randomized trials. Patients with diffuse liver metastases can benefit from locoregional infusion chemotherapy. Symptoms improve in most patients and objective responses are higher than those reported for systemic chemotherapy. Survival benefit with respect to untreated patients, has not yet been demonstrated by prospective randomized studies. Future improvements may be achieved by using new treatment modalities, such as new drug combinations, repeat arterial
ischemia
, and local tumor destruction. As these types of treatment are still experimental they should be employed only in prospective clinical trials.
...
PMID:Colorectal metastases to the liver: present results and future strategies. 183 42
In patients with midgut carcinoid tumors a curative, radical tumor removal should be attempted when possible. As these tumors are generally malignant, irrespective of size, the radical surgery implies that intestinal resection for excision of a primary tumor should be combined with an extended mesenteric resection. When the patients present with the carcinoid syndrome the disease is, with few exceptions, too advanced for curative surgery. However, surgery often has to be performed also in patients with the advanced carcinoids. Patients with more extensive disease may thus benefit from surgical debulking of large mesenteric or hepatic
metastases
. Moreover, when the patients present with abdominal symptoms it is important to exclude a threatening major abdominal complication, such as intestinal obstruction or
ischemia
. As these complications may cause malnutrition and deterioration, it is important to treat them properly, sometimes by repeated surgery.
...
PMID:Abdominal surgery in patients with midgut carcinoid tumors. 185 12
Twenty-two iatrogenic vascular injuries caused by resection of tumors with local recurrences or adjuvant chemotherapy were treated over a 42-month period in 11 female and 8 male patients with cancer (58% had documented
metastases
). Sixteen of 22 vascular injuries were caused by intraarterial administration of chemotherapy (8 emboli; 8 direct catheter trauma), and six were caused by resection of tumors with local invasion. The injuries were extremity
ischemia
(15 extremities in 13 patients), pseudoaneurysm (4), expanding hematoma (3 injuries in 2 patients). Twenty-two surgical repairs included bypass of severely damaged arteries in five, embolectomy in five, interposition grafts in three, pseudoaneurysm resection and primary repair in three, primary repair of three vascular injuries, and one patch angioplasty. Leg amputation was required in two patients. Seventeen of 19 patients had successful vascular repairs with resolution of preoperative indications for vascular repair without intraoperative or postoperative deaths. Long term follow-up (mean, 17 months) showed no recurrence of vascular problems; however, two patients died of
metastatic cancer
at 6 and 24 weeks after vascular repair. This study supports an aggressive approach to the management of vascular injuries caused by therapeutic interventions for malignancy despite the presence of
metastatic disease
.
...
PMID:Vascular trauma as a result of therapeutic procedures for the treatment of malignancy. 188 Aug 39
Hepatic metastases rather than the primary neoplasm usually dictate the course of the disease and patient's survival. For unresectable disease, intraarterial infusion of chemotherapy, embolization, and chemoembolization are viable alternatives. Intraarterial therapy for hepatic
metastases
is based on the dual blood supply of the normal liver (portal vein, 75%, and hepatic artery, 25%) and that of the tumors (hepatic artery, 90%). Intraarterial infusion delivers a higher concentration of chemotherapy, whereas chemoembolization adds
ischemia
and increased contact time with the tumor. Selective vascular occlusion for infusion, redistribution of the blood supply and pulsatile flow enhance the delivery of therapeutic agents to the liver.
...
PMID:Hepatic artery infusion and chemoembolization in the management of liver metastases. 212 43
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