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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The role of videosurgery in the treatment of gastrointestinal cancers is still controversial. However port-site metastases, reported with high rate (0.6-21%) have reduced the enthusiasm and still represent object of research. Port-site metastases pathophysiology is not yet clear. However in the last years the incidence is decreased at a percentage less than 2% and similar to that reported after traditional surgery (0.6-5.3%) due to a patient selection and a better videosurgical technique. Implant for direct contact, pneumoperitoneum, gas utilized, trocar positioning and relative tessutal trauma, visceral manipulation, frequent instrumental reintroduction represent the main pathophysiologic factors involved. Pneumoperitoneum produces an increase of the abdominal pressure with turbulent flows and the CO2 (stimulating of neoplastic cells growth?) transports neoplastic cells at the port site. However metastases occurs only when an elevate cellular concentration is present "gas less" videosurgery is not free from this complication but with a lower incidence. "Chimney effect", due to the leakage of gas or fluid containing aerosol neoplastic cells at port site, represents another important factor. In accord with such studies employing alternative gas (Helium) reduces the implant of neoplastic cells. Port site parietal trauma produces fibrin deposites that represents a substratum for cellular implant, growth and protection against immunitary host defense. Wound ischemia induces a macrophagic activity decrease. In view of these concepts the surgeon must respect some mandatory principles in the videosurgical approach to neoplastic diseases. Safety parietal trocar fixation avoiding gas or fluid port site leakage such as abdominal desuffling only through trocars in site are mandatory. Instrumental cleaning with cytoxic solution (Betadine)--neoplastic cells are isolated from instrumental lavage liquid--such as as irrigation and sterilization (5 FU) of porte site are very important rules. Wound incision--never too small--must be accurately sutured. During operation cutting through or handling tumor are contraindicated, especially when the neoplasm involves serosa. Surgical specimens must be extracted in bags absolutely through parietal protection system. High vascular ligature represents another technical rule to respect in every case like in traditional surgery.
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PMID:[Parietal metastasis in laparoscopic surgery of colorectal carcinoma]. 1222 76

Extracorporeal circulation (ECC) is not only used for open heart surgery. There are also other surgical and medical applications. ECC can be used for encephalic arteries surgery to induce hypothermia and maximally protect the brain. Femoro-femoral ECC may be needful for urgent traumatologic surgery of the supra-aortic trunci. Intracranial aneurysm repair can occasionally necessitate deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest with ECC. Renal cell carcinomas may metastasize to the right atrium and surgery with ECC is mandatory for complete excision. Some reports in the literature mention use of ECC for hepatic surgery of intra-hepatic aneurysms. With acute peripheral ischemia, metabolites in the affected limb can be washed out with good results. Medical indications for ECC are numerous with pulmonary assistance as one of the foremost when mechanical ventilation failed. Homogeneous and rapid rewarming of hypothermic patients can be achieved with ECC. Finally, some groups have reported the use of ECC to administer chemotherapy in limb melanoma.
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PMID:[Extracorporeal circulation: an extraordinary tool that is not just for cardiac surgeons]. 1241 Jan 43

A 73-year old woman presented with mild paraparesis and hypesthesia of the legs. Furthermore, she complained dizziness, fainting and dyspnea. There was a history of peripheral artery disease, diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension and chronic atrial fibrillation. Five years ago she had breast cancer with removal of the left mamma and additional radiation therapy. Cardiac catheterization at that time demonstrated no significant coronary stenoses. A contrast-enhanced CT-scan excluded lumbal spinal metastases. Instead, a subtotal occlusion of the abdominal aorta was noticed, but was initially interpreted as a chronic thrombosis because there were no typical symptoms and only moderate pain. About 24 hours later the patient developed an acute ischemic syndrome of the legs with progressive paraparesis, cold and pale legs in combination with acidosis and hyperventilation. Color-coded duplex ultrasound showed only a small turbulent flow in the ilial arteries, highly suspicious of a complete occlusion of the distal aorta. Angiography revealed an acute total occlusion of the infrarenal aorta without collaterals. During surgical intervention, complete obstruction of the abdominal aorta above the bifurcation was confirmed. Subsequent embolectomy was performed and an embolus consisting of several layers of different age was extracted. After successful surgical intervention with subsequent clinical improvement, the patient's clinical condition deteriorated a few day later. She died on day 9 after surgery from a complete ischemia of the small intestine and the colon ascendens.
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PMID:[Atypical Leriche syndrome]. 1265 74

Patients with refractory advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma derive only minor benefit from chemotherapy. Based on evidence that urothelial carcinoma may be associated with impaired immunological reactivity, we conducted a phase II trial of interleukin-2 (IL-2), a biologic response modifier, to assess its efficacy and toxicity in treating refractory advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma. Seventeen patients with urothelial carcinoma who had undergone no more than 1 cisplatin-containing chemotherapy regimen were treated with IL-2 at a dose of 3 x 10(6) IU/m(2)/day by continuous intravenous infusion for 4 consecutive days each week for 4 weeks. Cycles were to be repeated every 6 weeks until disease progression. Toxic effects could be assessed in all 17 patients and response in 13. The most common grade III and IV toxic effects included hypotension (13/17); anemia (6/17); thrombocytopenia (4/17); granulocytopenia (3/17); and, in 1 patient each, cardiac ischemia, bowel perforation, and an increase in creatinine level. One sudden death was assumed to be treatment related. Although we found no objective antitumor activity for IL-2, median patient survival was 10.5 months (95% confidence interval, 5.8 to 17.1 months), with a 15.9-month median survival for 3 patients with poor performance status and visceral metastases. Further clinical investigation of the biological effect of IL-2 in urothelial carcinoma may be warranted.
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PMID:Treating refractory advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma with interleukin-2: a phase II study. 1268 23

Hepatic metastases are frequently encountered in patients with digestive endocrine tumors and their presence plays an important role in quality of life and overall prognosis. Surgery is the treatment method of choice for hepatic metastases but this is frequently impossible due to the extent of disease. Systemic chemotherapy is offered to patients with diffuse and/or progressive liver metastases but results are disappointing especially in patients with metastases of midgut origin. In the latter patients with carcinoid syndrome, somatostatin analogs are frequently initially effective but their efficacy wanes due to disease progression and development of tachyphylaxis. Other therapeutic options in the treatment of hepatic metastases are locoregional strategies where vascular occlusion induces ischemia in these highly vascular tumors using either surgical or radiological techniques. Available methods include surgical ligation of the hepatic artery, transient hepatic ischemia or sequential hepatic arterialization. Trans-catheter arterial chemoembolization has proven effective in terms of long palliation and objective tumor responses. Other treatments aimed at regional destruction either alone or in combination with surgery include radiofrequency ablation and cryotherapy. The latter are usually important adjuncts to surgery and are usually reserved for limited disease.
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PMID:Ablative therapies for liver metastases of digestive endocrine tumours. 1471 59

An 85-yr-old male presented with complaints of a 40-lb weight loss and a dull left upper quadrant abdominal pain. He also complained of decreased appetite, generalized weakness, generally not feeling well, and a dull left upper quadrant abdominal pain that was not relieved by food. He had a ventral and a left-sided inguinal hernia. Laboratory investigations revealed iron deficiency anemia, the cause of which was not apparent despite extensive investigation including computerized tomographic scans, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, and small-bowel follow-through examination. Surgical exploration for possible angiodysplasia, malignancy, and/or mesenteric ischemia revealed an incarcerated hernia, and the histopathological examination of the surgical specimen revealed high-grade angiosarcoma. The tumor showed strong positivity for vimentin and CD31 and a focal positivity for Factor VIII and CD34. At that time he was found to have hepatic metastases. He was started on thalidomide as an experimental measure with no change in the performance status and increasing evidence of necrosis in the metastatic lesion.
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PMID:Angiosarcoma of the small intestine: a possible role for thalidomide? 1471 38

Among novel promising approaches that have recently entered the scene of anti-cancer therapy angiogenesis inhibition and targeting cancer-causing genes (e.g. oncogenes) are of particular interest as potentially highly synergistic. One reason for this is that transforming genetic lesions driving cancer progression (e.g. mutations of ras and/or p53) are thought to be causative for the onset of tumor angiogenesis and thereby responsible for build up of vascular supply which is essential for cancer cell survival, malignant growth, invasion and metastasis. However, many of the same genetic alterations that emerge during disease progression and repeated rounds of mutagenic and/or apoptosis causing therapy could alter cellular hypoxia-, growth factor- and apoptotic pathways in such a manner, as to also render cancer cells (partially) refractory to the detrimental consequences of poor blood vessel accessibility (density), ischemia, hypoxia and growth factor deprivation. As recent experimental evidence suggests, such cancer cells could therefore display a reduced vascular demand and remain viable even in poorly perfused regions of the tumor as well as possess an overall growth/survival advantage. The latter circumstance may lead to (predict) diminished efficacy of anti-angiogenic agents in certain malignancies. Therefore, we propose that analysis of oncogenic pathways and gene expression profiling of cancer cells may lead to important clues as to potential efficacy of anti-angiogenic therapies, the direct target of which is the host vasculature, but which are ultimately aimed at (indirect) destruction/control of the cancer cells population. We also suggest that oncogene (tumor suppressor)-directed therapies may help reverse diminished vascular demand of highly transformed cancer cells and thereby facilitate (sensitize tumors to) therapies directed against vascular supply of cancers and their metastases.
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PMID:Oncogenes and tumor angiogenesis: the question of vascular "supply" and vascular "demand". 1501 93

We describe an unusual case of metastatic disease to the thyroid, characterized by massive intra-arterial embolization and clinical presentation as acute thyroiditis. The patient, a 37-year-old woman with a history of breast carcinoma, presented clinically with acute thyroiditis. No nodules were palpable, and fine-needle aspiration cytology of the left lobe was performed. It showed a pleomorphic carcinoma and was followed by total thyroidectomy. Histology disclosed a pleomorphic carcinoma diffusely affecting the thyroid gland. It was characterized by an extensive intra-arterial tumoral embolization. Immunohistochemistry confirmed the metastatic nature of the neoplasm. This is a very uncommon form of metastatic disease to the thyroid. The ischemia and necrosis associated with the embolic process were most probably responsible for this clinical presentation. This atypical clinical and cytologic presentation may induce confusion with a primary neoplasm, mainly anaplastic thyroid carcinoma.
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PMID:Massive thyroid tumoral embolism from a breast carcinoma presenting as acute thyroiditis. 1521 16

Hepatic metastases are frequent in patients with gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) endocrine tumors. The presence of hepatic metastases affects overall prognosis and quality of life especially in the presence of debilitating functional syndromes. Surgery, although the method of choice for hepatic metastases, is usually impossible due to disease extent. Results of systemic chemotherapy are also disappointing especially in patients with metastases from midgut GEP tumors. These latter patients usually have carcinoid syndrome which can be controlled by somatostatin analogues. Other therapeutic options in the treatment of highly vascular liver metastases from GEP tumors are locoregional strategies by inducing vascular occlusion resulting in ischemia and necrosis of tumoral tissue. Surgical ligation of the hepatic artery or transient hepatic ischemia has been replaced by transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE). TACE has proven effective in controlling symptoms and gives objective tumor response in about half of patients. Other regional destructive methods, used either alone or in combination with surgery, include radiofrequency ablation and cryotherapy. The latter strategies are poorly evaluated to date and are usually adjuncts to surgery and reserved for limited disease.
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PMID:Ablative therapies for liver metastases of gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors. 1547 22

Advanced MRI techniques, such as MR spectroscopy, diffusion and perfusion MR imaging can give important in vivo physiological and metabolic information, complementing morphologic findings from conventional MRI in the clinical setting. Combining perfusion MRI and MR spectroscopy can help in patients with brain masses in who the pre-operative differential diagnosis is unclear. This review demonstrates the use of dynamic, susceptibility weighted, contrast-enhanced MR imaging (DSC MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) to distinguish surgical from non-surgical lesions in the brain. There is overlap in the MRI appearance of many enhancing and ring-enhancing lesions such as gliomas, metastases, inflammatory lesions, demyelinating lesions, subacute ischemia, abscess and some AIDS related lesions. We review examples of histopathologically confirmed high-grade glioma, a middle cerebral artery territory infarct, a tumefactive demyelinating lesion and a metastasis for which conventional MR imaging (MRI) was non-specific and potentially misleading and demonstrate how DSC MRI and MRSI features were used to increase the specificity of neurodiagnosis. At several institutions, many patients routinely undergo MRI as well as MRSI and DSC MRI. Cerebral blood flow (CBF), mean transit time (MTT), and relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) measurements are obtained from regions of maximal perfusion as determined from perfusion color overlay maps. Metabolite levels and ratios are determined for Choline (Cho), N-Acetyl Aspartate (NAA), Lactate and Lipids (LL). Metabolite levels are obtained by measuring the peak heights of each metabolite and the ratios are obtained from these measurements for Cho/Cr, Cho/NAA and NAA/Cr. Neurosurgical intervention carries substantial morbidity, mortality, financial and potential emotional cost to the patient and family. Making a pre-operative diagnosis allows the neurosurgeon to be confident in the choice of treatment plan for the patient and allays considerable patient anxiety. The utility of combining clinical findings with multi-parametric information from perfusion and spectroscopic MR imaging in differentiating surgical lesions from those which do not require surgical intervention is discussed.
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PMID:Differentiating surgical from non-surgical lesions using perfusion MR imaging and proton MR spectroscopic imaging. 1556 Jul 13


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