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

Between November 1, 1995, and January 31, 1996, four separate thoracoscopic spinal fixation surgeries were performed via extended manipulating channels using the so-called three-portal technique. The diagnoses included three spinal metastases and one T11 burst fracture. All patients had myelopathy at presentation. Using the three-portal technique, the conventional spinal instruments and fixation devices could be passed freely through the extended manipulating channels (usually 3-4 cm) into the chest cavity and manipulated by techniques similar to those used in standard open procedures. A reduction-fixation spinal plate with variable screw and plate anchoring angles was successfully inserted in the procedures. The total length of the operation ranged from 3.5 to 5 h (average 4.3 h), and the total blood loss was 1000-2500 ml (average 1500 ml). There were no intraoperative deaths, and no patient showed neurological deterioration following the procedures. On the basis of these results, we believe that the combination of video-assisted thoracoscopy and conventional spinal instruments presented in this report would be an ideal method for performing these procedures. Throughout the operation, only one trocar was employed for introducing the thoracoscope. The thoracoports were used temporarily during tumor tissue retrievals. This technique makes thoracoscopy-assisted spinal fixation simple and easy. It allows greater control of intraoperative vessel bleeding and reduces the number of portals required during the procedure (on average to 3). In addition, the technique reduced the amount of endoscopic materials required for the procedure, thus reducing the cost of treatment.
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PMID:Analysis of techniques for video-assisted thoracoscopic internal fixation of the spine. 945 48

Nineteen patients with nervous system metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were evaluated retrospectively. Nervous system metastasis was frequently initial presentation of HCC (seven out of 19 patients). Seven patients had metastases of the brain, of whom four had a stroke-like presentation. CT or MRI in these patients showed intracerebral hematomas in watershed areas. Enhancing lesion or edema adjacent to the hematoma helped differentiate these lesions from classical hypertensive hematomas. One patient with metastasis to the clivus presented with isolated six nerve palsy. The remaining 11 patients had spinal epidural metastases producing myelopathy in seven and radiculopathy in four. Radiation therapy failed to control the clinical course.
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PMID:Nervous system involvement by metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma. 952 30

A case is reported of a 44-year old woman with metastatic choriocarcinoma of the thoracic extradural space causing paraplegia. Spinal cord compression due to an extradural deposit is an emergency in neurosurgical practice. The majority of these lesions are metastatic. To our knowledge choriocarcinoma metastases and extradural cord compression in the spinal canal is the first case reported in the neurosurgical literature.
Spinal Cord 1998 May
PMID:Metastatic choriocarcinoma in the thoracic extradural space: case report. 960 Nov 20

To evaluate safety and efficacy of the Olerud Cervical Fixation System a one-year follow up study was done by an independent observer. There were 30 patients (14 women) with a mean age of 68 (37-85) years. Indications were rheumatoid arthritis in 10, spinal stenosis in 6, trauma in 6, metastases in 4, revisions in 3, and painful spondylotic deformity in one patient. Short fusions were performed in 8 patients and long fusions in 22. Four patients were fused to occiput. C1-C2 fusion was performed in 3 patients. Nineteen of the 20 still alive were evaluated at follow up. One patient was deliberately fused in hyperlordosis, in the rest the alignment was acceptable. Primary stabilization was achieved in all but one. 107 pedicle screws were used; one screw in Th2 was placed lateral to the pedicle. 42 subaxial transarticular screws were used. There were no complications related to these screws. One patient experienced a non-instrument related neurological deterioration. Two infections and one hematoma drainage healed on conservative treatment. Loss of fixation and non-union developed in 2 patients. Patients with metastasis or myelopathy due to rheumatoid arthritis carried a high mortality risk. The Olerud Cervical Spine Fixation System is versatile in posterior fixation of the cervical spine and has proven to be both safe and efficient.
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PMID:The Olerud Cervical Fixation System; a study of safety and efficacy. 1042 16

A 34-year-old man underwent left orchidectomy for his left testicular seminoma. One month later, he developed paraplegia, hypesthesia under Th10 level and vesicorectal disturbance. He was diagnosed as having compressive myelopathy secondary to metastatic neoplasm at thoracic vertebra 10 and its extradural space which were revealed on magnetic resonance imaging. After administration of combination chemotherapy with cisplatin, etoposide and bleomycin, the extradural lesions diminished and the neurological symptoms gradually improved. In this case, intradural invasion of tumor cells was suspected because the level of human chorionic gonadotrophin beta subunit (HCG beta) concentration in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was higher than that in plasma, while radiographic scanning demonstrated regional tumor located at extradural space of Th10 level. It is important to evaluate the spread of tumor cells for the choice of therapy and the monitoring of HCG beta (plasma:CSF ratio) was considered to be one of the useful methods to detect the presence of central nerve system metastases from HCG-producing tumor.
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PMID:[A case of metastatic extradural seminoma suspected intradural invasion by the measurements of HCG beta concentration in CSF]. 1118 12

Paraneoplastic syndromes are disorders associated with cancer but without a direct effect of the tumor mass or its metastases on the nervous system. Small cell carcinoma of lung associated with paraneoplastic sensory neuronopathy and/or paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis with the presence of anti-Hu antibodies has been termed "anti-Hu syndrome." Anti-Hu associated PSN-PEM is an immune disorder in which both cell-mediated and humoral mechanisms are involved. Patients are considered affected by Anti-Hu associated PSN-PEM when they develop clinical signs and symptoms of CNS dysfunction and/or sensory neuropathy not caused by metastases or other disorders, and serum or cerebrospinal fluid is positive for Hu abs. SCLC is found in more than 90% of patients with cancer and positive Hu abs. Individual patients with Hu abs associated to SCLC may suffer PSN-PEM, limbic encephalitis, brainstem encephalopathy, opsoclonus-myoclonus, paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration or myelopathy. Hu abs have a specificity of 99% and sensitivity of 82% in detecting paraneoplastic neurological syndromes. There are two types of treatment: the first is to treat the cancer, the second is to suppress the immune reaction with the use of corticosteroids, cyclophosphamide, azathioprine, plasma exchange, intravenous immunoglobulin and immunoadsorption; however, treatment of paraneoplastic syndromes is generally unsatisfactory.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic syndromes associated with anti-Hu antibodies. 1134 32

Radiation treatment of malignant diseases of the spine poses unique challenges to the radiation oncology treatment team. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) offers the capability of delivering high doses to targets near the spine while respecting spinal cord tolerance. At the University of California, Irvine, 8 patients received a total of 10 courses to the spine for a variety of primary and metastatic malignant conditions. This paper discusses anatomical considerations, spinal cord radiation myelopathy, and treatment planning issues as it relates to the treatment of spinal cord lesions. Between October 1997 and August 2001, a total of 8 patients received 10 courses of IMRT for primary or metastatic disease of the spine. Cancers treated included metastatic lung, renal, adrenocortical cancers, and primary sarcomas and giant cell tumor. Five cases had 6 courses given for re-irradiation of symptomatic disease and 3 cases had 4 courses of IMRT as primary management of their spinal lesions. Although 3 courses were given postoperatively, these were for grossly residual disease. For the re-irradiation patients, the mean follow-up interval was 4 months. The local control was estimated at 14%. Of the patients treated with primary intent, the mean follow-up was 9 months and the local control rate 75%. No patients developed spinal cord complications.
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PMID:Intensity-modulated radiation therapy for the spine at the University of California, Irvine. 1207 65

Spinal cord metastases are an uncommon secondary location of a malignant neoplasm. They are rarely diagnosed during life and when that is the case, it is in the clinical setting of a disseminated cancer and very seldom as the first clinical manifestation. We report two patients, with no previous disease, who developed a progressive myelopathy. An intramedullary spinal cord tumor was diagnosed, based on the clinical picture and imaging studies. They were operated and biopsies showed spinal cord metastases whose primary tumor was a lung neoplasm. We discuss the clinical features in these patients, the diagnosis of progressive myelopathy in cancer patients, treatment and prognosis of this unusual secondary cancer location.
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PMID:[Spinal cord metastasis: an uncommon location. Experience in 2 cases]. 1208 Aug 82

Metastatic spinal cord compression, diagnosed in 3-7% of cancer patients, is one of the most dreaded complications of metastatic cancer. It is an oncologic emergency, which must be diagnosed early and treated promptly to achieve the best results and avoid progressive pain, paralysis, sensory loss and sphincter incontinence. Patients who are ambulatory at the time of the diagnosis have a higher probability of obtaining good response to treatment and a longer survival. In clinical practice, back pain accompanies metastatic spinal cord compression in most cases, even in patients with no neurologic deficits. Magnetic resonance imaging is the best tool for diagnosing metastatic spinal cord compression and is able to identify spinal cord compression in 32-35% patients with back pain, bone metastases and normal neurologic examination. Moreover, magnetic resonance imaging gives the extension of the lesion, can diagnose other unsuspected clinical metastatic spinal cord compression sites, and is useful for the radiation oncologist in defining the target volume. Radiotherapy is the treatment of choice in most cases, whereas surgery is advised only in selected patients (ie, if stabilization is necessary, if radiotherapy has already been given in the same area, when vertebral body collapse causes bone impingement on the cord or nerve roots, when there are diagnostic doubts, or when computed tomography-guided percutaneous vertebral biopsy cannot be performed). Laminectomy should be abandoned in favor of more aggressive surgery (ie, posterior, anterior, and/or lateral approach, tumor mass resection, and stabilization of the spine). Generally, radiotherapy must be administered 7-10 days after surgery. The optimal radiation schedule has not been defined. However, as recently suggested by some clinical trials, even the hypofractionated radiotherapy regimens are effective and can be used without increasing radiation-induced myelopathy. Moderate doses of dexamethasone should be used in the early phases of therapy. After radiotherapy, spinal recurrence is generally found in sites different from the first compression area. A close post-treatment follow-up is suggested using clinical parameters (pain, motor and sphincter function), and magnetic resonance imaging should be performed only when a second metastatic spinal cord compression and/or myelopathy are clinically suspected.
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PMID:Management of metastatic spinal cord compression. 1487 Jul 66

A 3-year-old boy presented with headaches, vomiting, lethargy and papilledema. Communicating hydrocephalus along with transependymal fluid absorption and meningeal contrast enhancement was identified on CT. The enhancement was initially thought to be the result of a partially treated meningitis (child was previously on oral antibiotics for a presumed mycoplasma pneumonia). A right ventricular-peritoneal shunt was placed. CSF studies procured during the procedure were all normal. In contrast, CSF from a lumbar puncture contained a high protein, and cytology was highly suspicious for malignancy. Spine MRI showed diffuse leptomeningeal enhancement and a 1.5-cm intramedullary lesion at T12-L1 associated with minimal edema. The lesion was subtotally resected (70%) and diagnosed as an astrocytoma (mostly Kernohan grade 2 but with areas of grade 3). Chemotherapy was administered and follow-up spine MRI at 2 months did not reveal any residual tumor, however, the leptomeningeal enhancement persisted. Sixteen months later, at the completion of the chemotherapy and radiation therapy, the spine MRI remained unchanged. Neurological examination has always been normal. This case illustrates how a spinal cord astrocytoma can metastasize via spinocranial dispersion and present early with hydrocephalus rather than myelopathy.
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PMID:Hydrocephalus as the initial presentation of a spinal cord astrocytoma associated with leptomeningeal spread. 1588 10


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