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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The management of patients with hepatic
metastases
from colorectal carcinoma is controversial. While a "no treatment" attitude still persists, other patients undergo systemic chemotherapy with very limited results. Other possible options are hepatic resection and locoregional treatments. One hundred twenty-three patients with hepatic
metastases
from colorectal cancer were treated at the authors' institution over a period of 15 years. Thirty-nine patients underwent hepatic resection while 84 underwent various forms of locoregional treatment. Several patients in the latter group were registered in one national (RNSI) Phase 2 study and one international (EORTC) Phase 3 trial. The authors' experience confirms the opinion that hepatic resection can be performed with the aim of curing in patients with isolated
metastases
. A five-year survival rate can be achieved in 25 to 30 percent of the resectable patients. Patients with unresectable extrahepatic disease or multiple bilateral
metastases
are usually excluded from resection. In other cases, hepatic resection should be carried out when technically possible. The value of adjuvant chemotherapy to the remaining liver has to be tested in prospective randomized trials. Patients with diffuse
metastases
can benefit from locoregional infusion of chemotherapeutic agents. Symptoms improve in most patients; objective responses vary from 53 to 83 percent of the cases, which is a higher rate than that reported for systemic chemotherapy. Survival may be prolonged in respect to untreated patients but this has not been demonstrated yet by prospective randomized studies. Current trends are continuous infusion of chemotherapeutic agents and experimentation of new drugs or drug combinations. Future improvements may be achieved by adding hepatic arterial
ischemia
, hyperthermia, or radiation therapy. As these kinds of treatments are still experimental, they should be applied to the patients only in the context of prospective clinical trials.
...
PMID:Colorectal metastases to the liver: present status of management. 216 54
We present 13 patients with 15 episodes of colonic volvulus, who underwent colonoscopy to decompress and/or devolvulate. Colonoscopic exploration demonstrated a non obstructive dilatation in three cases. In the remaining 10 patients, with 12 episodes of volvulus, decompression was obtained in 83.3% and devoluvulation in 41.6%. There were two failures, due to peritoneal
metastases
and adhesions which fixed the volvulus. In 40% of the cases there were mild ischemic signs. Forty per cent of the patients were submitted to elective surgery and the two failures (20%) were operated in emergency. The remaining 4 patients declined surgical treatment. At is allows differential diagnosis, we think that, for these patients, colonoscopy should be the first therapeutic approach; it also allows decompression and/or devolvulation and an early diagnosis of the associated
ischemia
.
...
PMID:[Colonoscopic approach in the therapy of sigmoid volvulus]. 234 81
Computed tomography (CT) findings in eleven patients with symptomatic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dissemination from cerebral glioblastoma were analyzed and, in seven cases subsequently autopsied, they were compared with histological observations. Each patient had multiple CT abnormalities including periventricular enhancement (5/11), subarachnoid enhancement (10/11) and progressive hydrocephalus (7/9) by cranial CT, and small filling defects with or without block (5/5) by CT myelography. The areas that showed periventricular or subarachnoid enhancement on CT were confirmed to have macroscopically detectable seeding at autopsy. On the other hand, microscopic deposits were more widely distributed than the enhancement suggested, and were hardly visualized on CT. In association with subarachnoid seeding, we found low-density lesions on CT which had resulted from
ischemia
or reinvasion of adjacent structures by disseminated glioblastoma and resulting parenchymal edema. By cranial CT, subarachnoid enhancement seems to be a very reliable sign of CSF seeding, whereas periventricular enhancement due to CSF
metastases
should be carefully distinguished from that due to periventricular tumor infiltration. CT myelography is capable of revealing minute metastatic spinal deposits and may be helpful for ruling out spinal seeding as well as its precise evaluation.
...
PMID:Symptomatic cerebrospinal fluid dissemination of cerebral glioblastoma. Computed tomographic findings in 11 cases. 239 40
Clinical and experimental data suggest a synergistic antitumoral effect with the combined treatment of radiotherapy and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) serving as a radiosensitizer. This combined modality was studied in 30 malignant melanoma patients with advanced locoregional or isolated, bulky, soft-tissue or visceral
metastases
. All patients were symptomatic, pain being the chief complaint, followed by symptoms related to large tumors. Treatment was given on an ambulatory basis, twice weekly, and consisted of 5-FU, 500 mg/m2 administered in 8-h i.v. drip infusion, followed by radiotherapy 8 h after completion of the 5-FU administration. 60Co teleunit, delivering 400 rad per dose per fraction, was given over 6 1/2 weeks to a total of 5,200 rad. The overall response rate was 70% (21 of 30 patients). Three patients (10%) achieved a complete response lasting from 3 to 11 months, and 18 (60%) achieved a partial response lasting from 3 to 13 months. The response rate was 82% for skin, 75% for lymph node, and 43% for visceral
metastases
. Symptomatic relief was obtained in 83% (25 of 30) of the patients. This palliative therapy was well-tolerated, and patients were able to maintain their routine lifestyles throughout. Only in one patient was 5-FU abandoned after 3 weeks, due to cardiac
ischemia
. Similar response rates have only been achieved with radiotherapy alone employing individual fractions of 600 rad or higher. Since the 5-FU we added is known to have a very limited effect on malignant melanoma, this study suggests its potential as a radiosensitizer in malignant melanoma.
...
PMID:Conventional fractionation radiotherapy combined with 5-fluorouracil for metastatic malignant melanoma. 244 95
Mesenteric ischemia associated with carcinoid tumors often presents with nonspecific abdominal pain and is usually due to mesenteric branch artery occlusion caused by elastic vascular sclerosis. Mesenteric ischemia was defined by the operative findings of cyanosis or infarction. Eleven patients with intraabdominal metastatic carcinoid tumor were evaluated by angiography. Angiographic narrowing and occlusion of multiple peripheral jejunal and ileal intramesenteric branch arteries was present in 3 patients with mesenteric
ischemia
, but also occurred in 5 of 8 patients without mesenteric
ischemia
. Other angiographic abnormalities included staining of the primary tumor (5) or
metastases
(6), tenting of small mesenteric vessels (5), and occlusion of draining mesenteric veins (2). We conclude that in patients with midgut carcinoid tumors, angiographic narrowing and occlusion of peripheral mesenteric arteries most likely represents elastic vascular sclerosis, is indicative of mesenteric invasion of tumor, but correlates poorly with the presence of
ischemia
in the subtended bowel. Alternatively, a normal selective arteriogram should exclude mesenteric
ischemia
as the cause of abnormal pain.
...
PMID:Limitations of angiography for mesenteric ischemia caused by midgut carcinoid tumors. 250 47
Since 1978, six boys with prostatic rhabdomyosarcoma have been treated at our institution. Three had localized disease and were managed by initial biopsy, vincristine, actinomycin-D, and cyclophosphamide (VAC) chemotherapy, and bladder-sparing surgery with or without irradiation. Further combination chemotherapy ("pulse" VAC, Adriamycin, VP-16, cisplatin, and ifosfamide) was continued for 20 to 22 months following the induction course. Two boys had microscopic residual disease undetected by frozen section and unresponsive to radiotherapy. Subsequent total cystectomy 4 and 7 months later resulted in eradication of disease. In one patient, preservation of the bladder was achieved at the age of 3 months for 8 years. Artificial sphincter inserted to cure his urinary incontinence failed because of
ischemia
secondary to cuff compression and scar tissue. He is alive today with a modified Koch pouch urinary diversion. Of the 50% who had
metastatic disease
at presentation, two were dead within 12 months despite aggressive chemotherapy and irradiation. The third is currently on treatment. Although chemotherapy has markedly improved the prognosis, surgery is still necessary in most cases for cure. Bladder salvage is a desirable goal; however, residual microscopic disease, difficulty with frozen-section disease detection, and poor tissue vascularization for subsequent sphincter replacement remain significant obstacles.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcoma of the prostate in childhood: current challenges. 280 70
Radiography and microscopy were used to investigate the hepatic distribution of iodized oil injected into the hepatic artery in a rabbit VX2 tumor model. Iodized oil accumulates within hepatic
metastases
and in a ringlike fashion around them. Radiographic and histologic appearances were correlated, and it was concluded that ringlike deposition occurs in peritumoral sinusoids. There was no evidence that iodized oil is cleared by hepatic lymphatics. Early clearance of iodized oil into bile may possibly be caused by localized hepatic
ischemia
from oil microemboli or by direct phagocytosis by Kupffer cells. The remaining oil is washed through hepatic vasculature, circulates systemically, and is cleared by reticuloendothelial cells in lung, spleen, liver, and bone marrow. This mode of clearance, which has not been considered previously, may be important in the prediction of toxic effects caused by lipid and lipophilic antitumor agents administered via the hepatic artery.
...
PMID:Distribution of iodized oil within the liver after hepatic arterial injection. 302 47
Cardiac
metastases
are often clinically inapparent but have important prognostic significance. A total of 1046 consecutive autopsies performed between 1981 and 1983 were reviewed, and 210 patients with both premortem and autopsy diagnoses of cancer were found, in whom a recent (less than 3 months before death) ECG was available. Of these patients, 47 had cardiac
metastases
(group I) and 163 did not (group II). In group I, 19 patients had new ECG changes suggestive of myocardial ischemia or injury, including either diffuse T wave inversion (10%), segmental (ECG pattern suggestive of a specific coronary distribution) T wave inversion (80%), or ST elevation (10%). None of these patients had symptoms suggestive of myocardial ischemia. In group II, six patients had ECG changes suggestive of myocardial ischemia or injury: four patients with preterminal sepsis, one with myocardial infarction, and one with aspergillus nodules within the myocardium. New atrial arrhythmias (seven patients) and low voltage (10 patients) were found with greater frequency in group I patients (p less than 0.0005 and p less than 0.00001, respectively, vs group II). Patients with normal ECGs were unlikely to have cardiac
metastases
; however, the finding of nonspecific ST-T wave changes was not helpful in differentiating the two groups. In clinically stable patients with cancer and no cardiac symptoms suggestive of
ischemia
, any new ECG change should raise the suspicion of cardiac
metastases
. The ECG finding of myocardial ischemia or injury has high specificity (96%, p less than 0.000001) for cardiac
metastases
.
...
PMID:Electrocardiographic markers of cardiac metastasis. 378 78
A 61-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with the new onset of angina at rest and an ECG consistent with anterior wall
ischemia
. She was also noted to have a new cardiac murmur. Eighteen months earlier, she had been treated for squamous cell carcinoma of the base of the tongue. Thirteen months ago, she had local recurrence treated with radiotherapy, but had no evidence of recurrent or
metastatic disease
at the time of present admission. Echocardiography revealed intracardiac and extracardiac masses; surgical biopsy confirmed metastatic carcinoma to the heart which was responsible for her symptoms and the new murmur. Symptomatic cardiac
metastases
from squamous cell carcinoma is an unusual situation which, in this case, was easily diagnosed with echocardiography.
...
PMID:Metastatic squamous cell carcinoma to the heart. Unusual cause of angina decubitus and cardiac murmur. 402 58
In most reviews of arterial embolism or thrombosis the source of emboli or the cause of thrombosis can reasonably be established in over 90% of patients. Still about 10% remain without demonstrable cardiac or intraarterial sources. Although hypercoagulability induced by malignancy has been alluded to as a cause of unexplained intravascular thrombosis reports of arterial thromboembolism with such association are rare. Seven patients with unequivocal thromboembolism are presented. Two distinct clinical patterns are observed, one with in situ thrombosis of small arteries and the other with occlusion of large arteries causing limb
ischemia
or fatal organ infarction. The various pathogenetic mechanisms of arterial thrombosis or embolism in malignancy include sustained spasm of arteries, precipitation of cryoglobulins or other abnormal proteins in small arteries, direct tumor invasion of arteries, fragmentation and embolization of intracardiac or intraarterial
metastases
and spontaneous arterial thrombosis due to hypercoagulability. The hypercoagulable state can be recognized by the observation of shortened bleeding and clotting times, partial thromboplastin and prothrombin times, elevation of coagulation factors, platelets and yield stress index and resistance to anticoagulation. Patients presenting with arterial thromboembolic events with out demonstrable source should be investigated for malignancy. Conversely patients with malignancy should be searched for evidence of hypercoagulability in an attempt to prevent arterial thromboembolic complications.
...
PMID:Arterial thrombosis and embolism in malignancy. 403 Aug 80
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