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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Peptic ulceration
is a known complication of hepatic arterial chemotherapy for
metastatic disease
. We report a case of peptic ulceration associated with marked epithelial atypia initially interpreted as carcinoma, probably metastatic in nature. Subsequent partial gastric resection proved the lesion benign. Examination of other gastric biopsies from ulcerated and nonulcerated mucosa from similarly treated patients has revealed similar marked atypical changes. The etiology of the epithelial atypia and ulceration remains unanswered, but is probably related to locally enhanced chemotherapeutic cytotoxicity or ischemia. Care should be taken not to interpret the marked epithelial atypia as carcinoma in this clinical setting.
...
PMID:Peptic ulceration with marked epithelial atypia following hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy. A lesion initially misinterpreted as carcinoma. 622 Jun 16
The plasma and 24-hr urinary levels of cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and of cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cGMP) were determined for 19 healthy normal patients, 54 patients with six types of nonneoplastic diseases (cholelithiasis,
peptic ulcer
, coronary heart disease, hypertension, regional ileitis, and cirrhosis), and 54 patients with five types of neoplastic disease (cancers of the lung, colon, and breast, acute myelocyte leukemia, and Hodgkin's disease). The cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate levels of urine and plasma in normal subjects, in noncancer subjects, and in cancer subjects did not differ significantly. The cGMP levels in the noncancer group were similarly unchanged from those in the normal group. However, mean cGMP levels in the urine and plasma of patients with neoplastic diseases were, respectively, 2- and 3-fold greater than the normal values (p less than 0.005 for urine and p less than 0.05 for plasma). Pharmacokinetic studies with [3H]cGMP in nine healthy controls and 15 patients with neoplasia showed that the mean production rate of this nucleotide in patients with
metastatic cancer
was elevated when compared to normal patients, but many values fell within the normal range. In acute leukemia, the production rate was seven times normal, with four of five patients having values clearly outside the normal range. The plasma clearance rate in patients with neoplasia was not decreased when compared to that in normal patients. It is proposed that an increased production rate, rather than any change in plasma clearance, accounts for the increased levels of cGMP in the plasma and urine of some patients with neoplastic disease.
...
PMID:Elevated plasma and urinary guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate and increased production rate in patients with neoplastic diseases. 625 69
Sixty-one patients with carcinoma of the remnant stomach after distal gastrectomy were admitted by the end of 1982. Twenty-six of them were gastrectomized for benign disease such as
peptic ulcer
and 35 for malignant disease such as gastric carcinoma. The age of the benign group was 58, and the average interval from the first operation was 19 years. The corresponding figures for the malignant group were 63 and 8 years, respectively. In the malignant group, the methods of anastomosis at the first operation were 18 cases of Billroth-I (B-I) and 17 of B-II. The lesion was located at the surgical stump in 7 patients and distant from the stump in 14 patients in this group. In the benign group, there were 10 cases of B-I and 16 of B-II, and no differences were seen in the location. Early carcinoma was noted in 11 patients, and 34 were advanced. Differentiated adenocarcinoma was observed in 25 cases and undifferentiated in 20 in the resected specimen. Although no
metastases
were seen in early cases, the rate of lymph node metastasis was 70%, and the five-year survival rate was 21% in advanced cases, and 80% in early cases.
...
PMID:[Studies on carcinoma of the remnant stomach after distal gastrectomy]. 651 30
In a patient with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, control of the
peptic ulcer
diathesis was attempted by excision of a small duodenal gastrinoma and removal of three lymph nodes containing
metastases
. The patient has been asymptomatic for 2.5 years with basal achlorhydria, a normal serum gastrin level and a negative gastrin response to secretin. Our experience with this patient emphasizes the fact that the presence of
metastatic disease
does not preclude the possibility of long-term control of hypergastrinemia by resection of the tumor. Attempts to cure the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome by tumor resection alone, however, should only be made in patients whose hypersecretion is adequately controlled by antisecretory drugs.
...
PMID:Control of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome by excision of primary and metastatic tumor. 670 15
Systemic mastocytosis is a rare disorder that infrequently affects the GI tract. Bowel involvement in mastocytosis is characterized by thickened folds and small mucosal nodules, and there is an increased incidence of
peptic ulcer disease
and malabsorption. This paper describes a new case of mastocytosis that presented radiographically as 1.0-1.5 cm gastric and duodenal nodules. Some of the duodenal nodules were bull's-eye lesions with central collections of barium. Mastocytosis, along with primary neoplasms, aberrant pancreas, eosinophilic granuloma, and
metastases
should be included in the differential for bull's-eye lesions of the GI tract.
...
PMID:Bull's-eye lesions: a new gastrointestinal presentation of mastocytosis. 672 33
The many manifestations of carcinoids will continue to puzzle and intrigue surgeons. Because these are dynamic tumors which produce multiple hormones with many potential side effects, an aggressive surgical debulking of them is advocated. Even in the presence of
metastatic disease
, some long-term survival can be anticipated. The most debillitating aspect of this tumor to the patient is the carcinoid syndrome. The symptoms occur erratically and are often not well controlled by presently available medication. Although
metastatic disease
present at diagnosis is most commonly seen with jejunoileal carcinoids, colorectal carcinoids appear to be the most lethal tumors. However, they are rarely associated with the symptoms of carcinoid syndrome. Carcinoids may often be associated with other types of tumors, some of which are known to produce their own hormones. Survival of the patients seems to be related to their other tumor type rather than the primary carcinoid. The clinician should be aware of the strong association of carcinoids with
peptic ulcer disease
. The ulcer diathesis is probably related to ectopic histamine production and can usually be controlled by cimetidine and antacids, although surgical intervention may be required.
...
PMID:Carcinoids and the carcinoid syndrome. 685 14
The content of T- and B-lymphocytes was studied in the blood of 72 patients with gastric ulcer and carcinoma. The amount of complete T- and B-lymphocytes and incomplete B-lymphocytes was found to dramatically decrease in patients with
peptic ulcer
and gastric carcinoma with distant
metastases
. The authors believe that the data obtained could be used in addition to others when choosing the specific treatment of patients with gastric carcinoma in the postoperative period.
...
PMID:[Lymphocyte count in the blood of stomach cancer patients]. 697 17
Among endocrine tumors arising in the intestinal tract, midgut argentaffin EC cell carcinoids, duodenal gastrin cell tumors and rectal trabecular L cell carcinoids, in order of decreasing frequency, are those better represented. Together they account for more than 80% of such tumors. Duodenal somatostatin cell tumors, gangliocytic paragangliomas and poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas, are also well defined tumor entities. The carcinoid syndrome with intermittent flushing, hypotension and diarrhea, and the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome with severe
peptic ulcer disease
, are the only hyperfunctional syndromes consistently found in association with these tumors. The carcinoid syndrome arises in about 10% of intestinal carcinoids, usually in their advanced metastatic stage. The Zollinger-Ellison syndrome occurs in association with about 40% of gastrin cell tumors, including small intramural growths. Tumor prognosis depends on mode and site of presentation, histology, cell type(s), size, level of invasion,
metastases
(especially distant
metastases
) and associated clinical syndrome or background disease.
...
PMID:Endocrine tumors of the small and large intestine. 747 53
CD44, an integral membrane glycoprotein expressed by many cell types, serves as the principal transmembrane hyaluronate receptor and may be a determinant of metastatic and invasive behavior in carcinomas. The expression of CD44 in 23 gastric adenocarcinoma and 12
peptic ulcer disease
(
PUD
) resection specimens and gastric carcinoma cell lines HS746t and KATO III was examined by immunohistochemistry using the murine monoclonal antibody A3D8 on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue or cells. Western blot analysis of whole cell lysates of KATO III and HS746t cells showed protein bands at 85 to 90 kd with KATO III cells expressing an additional band at 145 kd. In normal stomach gastric epithelium was negative. In
PUD
foveolar epithelium was focally positive, but staining did not correlate with the extent of gastritis. In carcinoma cases intensity of staining was progressively stronger comparing intestinal metaplasia with dysplasia with intramucosal carcinoma. Invasive carcinoma was invariably more strongly positive than dysplasia or intramucosal carcinoma. Twelve adenocarcinomas were weakly positive and 11 were strongly positive. The staining intensity of
metastases
(12 cases) was the same or weaker than the primary tumor. For the 12 patients whose carcinomas were weakly positive, mean length of survival for the six who died was 23.3 months. Five of the 11 patients whose carcinomas strongly expressed CD44 died within the study period with a mean length of survival of 11.0 months. A key consequence of CD44 overexpression in gastric carcinomas may be development of the invasive phenotype and strong expression may indicate a poorer prognosis.
...
PMID:Expression of the cell adhesion molecule CD44 in gastric adenocarcinomas. 752 75
Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) is caused by gastrin-secreting tumors called gastrinomas. Patients commonly present with
peptic ulcer disease
and may have recurrent, multiple, and atypically located ulcers, e.g. in the jejunum. Alternatively, severe diarrhea may be the only presenting symptom. Patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia Type I (MEN-I) and ZES become symptomatic at an earlier age than patients with sporadic ZES. Patients with ZES have elevated fasting serum gastrin concentrations (> 100 pg/ml) and basal gastric acid hypersecretion (> 15 mEq/h). The secretin stimulation test is the best test to distinguish ZES from other conditions resulting in elevated gastrin levels. Gastric acid hypersecretion can be controlled in virtually all patients with H2-receptor antagonists or omeprazole, thus rendering total gastrectomy unnecessary. Computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), radionuclide octreotide scanning, endoscopic ultrasound, and the selective arterial secretin injection test are the recommended imaging studies for localization of gastrinoma; nevertheless, 50% of gastrinomas are not evident on preoperative imaging studies. All patients with sporadic gastrinoma who do not have unresectable
metastatic disease
should undergo exploratory laparotomy for potential curative resection. With increased awareness of duodenal tumors, gastrinoma can be found in 80-90% of patients. Surgery may be the most effective treatment for metastatic gastrinoma if most or all of the tumor can be resected. The management of patients with MEN-I and ZES remains controversial. Some clinicians advocate an aggressive surgical approach, whereas others have had little success in rendering patients eugastrinemic.
...
PMID:Management of patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 759 74
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