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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A rare pseudodiverticular pattern of metastatic malignancy to the
ureter
is reported along with pathologic findings at postmortem examination in three patients. There was no clinical or pathological obstruction. This pattern is due to malignancy-induced edema in the subepithelial connective tissues and muscularis propria causing displacement of these layers into the ureteral lumen resulting in an undulating epithelial surface. The epithelium itself is normal.
Metastases
to the
ureter
is uncommon in life unless associated with ureteral obstruction. Ureteral pseudodiverticulosis found in vivo in a nonobstructed patient with known metastatic malignancy is likely due to inflammatory causes and usually reversible with antibiotic and medical therapy. A patient with widespread malignancy showing nonreversibility of the ureteral pseudodiverticular pattern, even in the absence of obstruction, should be considered a candidate for impending obstruction and followed closely for ureteral stent placement.
...
PMID:Pseudodiverticulosis: unusual appearance for metastases to the ureter. 807 70
We present a simple method to dilate ureteral strictures, which was performed in 7 patients with
metastatic cancer
(1 breast, 1 lymphoma, 2 ovarian and 3 colorectal tumors) who presented with newly discovered obstruction in the distal
ureter
. The obstruction was due to tumor in the pelvis in 5 patients and to pelvic radiotherapy in 2. A 0.035-inch guide wire was passed beyond the stricture cystoscopically. In each case a double pigtail stent could not be passed beyond the stricture over the guide wire. The strictures were then dilated with progressively larger Van Andel catheters passed over the guide wire through the cystoscope. Following dilation a 7.5F to 8.5F soft double pigtail catheter was easily advanced. All patients had good drainage on followup radiographic studies. The method is presented as an alternative to balloon dilation of lower ureteral strictures when the goal is placement of an adequate diameter indwelling ureteral stent.
...
PMID:Dilation of lower ureteral strictures with Van Andel catheters. 820 91
A case of malignant giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath of the right hip, which developed in a 72-year-old Japanese woman, is described. The tumor exhibited histological similarities to a benign giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath (localized nodular tenosynovitis). The resected tumor, measuring 9 x 9 x 11 cm, was located in the adductor muscle and invaded the proximal femur and acetabulum. The nodule was encapsulated with a thin membrane which was soft and gelatinous in consistency and varied in color from yellow to brown. The synovium of the hip joint was normal. The primary lesion was composed of plump polyhedral and spindle-shaped cells. The nuclei were large, irregular and hyperchromatic, and contained prominent nucleoli. A moderated number of multinucleated giant cells was scattered throughout the lesion. There was little stromal collagen. In the majority of the specimens, pseudoglandular or alveolar spaces were predominant. An ultrastructural study demonstrated three cell types: fibroblast-like, histiocyte-like and an intermediate. The patient underwent reconstructive surgery with a Dacron fabric-enveloped alumina ceramic pelvic prosthesis and total hip components after resection of the primary lesion. Unfortunately, because of a local recurrence, a hemipelvectomy was required 10 months after the initial operation. At that time the intestines were involved with the recurrent tumor, and the patient subsequently died of perforative peritonitis. An autopsy revealed distant
metastases
to the right pelvis, urinary bladder, right
ureter
, ilium, mesenterium and lungs.
...
PMID:Malignant giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath: an autopsy report and review of the literature. 823 Jul 58
We report 59 patients who were considered candidates for laparoscopically assisted surgical staging (LASS) to manage their clinical stage I adenocarcinoma of the endometrium. Their ages ranged from 40 to 85 years, with a mean of 69; their weights ranged from 102 to 267 pounds, with a mean of 153 pounds. Patients with intraperitoneal disease were taken off study. Laparoscopic pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomies were performed based on the grade of the tumor and the depth of myometrial invasion. Six patients were discovered to have intraperitoneal disease. Of the remaining 53 patients, 29 underwent lymphadenectomy, 1 of whom had positive para-aortic nodes. Of the 24 patients who did not have laparoscopic lymphadenectomy, 2 should have, according to the study criteria; however, obesity precluded this from being performed. Eight patients had grade 3 lesions; of these, 4 lesions had metastasized. The remaining 3 patients with
metastatic disease
had grade 2 lesions. Complications were related to the laparoscopically assisted vaginal hysterectomy and resulted in two laparotomies: one for a transected
ureter
and the other for a cystotomy. Estimated blood loss was < 200 cc and the average hospital stay was 2.9 days. We feel that LASS is an attractive alternative to the traditional surgical approach in patients with stage I endometrial carcinoma.
...
PMID:Laparoscopically assisted surgical staging (LASS) of endometrial cancer. 824 71
Computed Tomography (CT) is an indispensable noninvasive method for staging transitional cell carcinomas of renal pelvis and
ureter
. Twenty-seven patients with upper urinary tract tumors were examined and the CT results correlated with histopathologic findings. These tumors exhibit three different development patterns: in our series we identified 17 intraluminal sessile lesions, 6 focal or concentric wall thickenings and finally 7 infiltrating masses; soft-tissue density lesions exhibited in all cases mild contrast enhancement (mean density increase: 38 HU). Even though the attenuation values of tumors do not allow the accurate demonstration of the depth of renal pelvis and ureteral wall invasion, CT can differentiate the lesions which are still confined within the external wall layers (CT1, 17 cases) from those invading the peripelvic-ureteral fat (CT2, 9 cases) or spreading to other organs as well as distant
metastases
(CT3, 4 cases). Delayed scans can also demonstrate intraluminal lesion extent and sometimes changes of patients' position allow better differentiation of wall outlines from peripheral fat. The overall staging accuracy of CT was 76.66% and its sensitivity was 93.33%. The assessment of lymph node
metastases
was the major cause of error in the CT evaluation of these tumors.
...
PMID:[Computed tomography evaluation of urothelial carcinomas of the upper urinary tract]. 824 87
The radiographic and sectional imaging features (ultrasound [US], computed tomography [CT], and magnetic resonance imaging [MRI]) of ureteral obstruction due to
metastatic disease
are reviewed. The radiologic findings depend on the pattern of the tumoral spread: hematogenous submucosal/mucosal metastasis, hematogenous adventitia
metastases
spreading along periureteral vessels, scirrhous metastatic spread along periureteral vessels, or metastatic spread into lymph nodes with perinodal desmoplastic reaction. Solitary or multiple extraluminal obstructions without substantial displacement of the
ureter
are characteristic. CT is the examination of choice for morphological analysis. Together with the patient's history and clinical data, a presumptive diagnosis of ureteral obstruction caused by
metastatic disease
can be made.
...
PMID:Metastatic disease of the ureter: patterns of tumoral spread and radiologic findings. 843
Fifty eight cases of primary tumors in the renal pelvis and
ureter
were treated at Toranomon Hospital between 1983 and 1992. They consisted of 32 renal pelvic tumors, 21 ureteral tumors and 5 tumors at both sites. The age of the patients ranged from 30 to 84 years (mean 63.1). Surgery was performed in 56 cases. Radical nephroureterectomy with concomitant ipsilateral retroperitoneal lymph node dissection was performed in 38 cases. The other surgeries were radical nephroureterectomy without lymph node dissection in 9, nephrectomy in 4, resection of
ureter
and reanastomosis in 3, radical nephroureterectomy and cystectomy in 1 and partial nephrectomy in 1. Pathologically, 53 were transitional cell carcinoma (TCC), 2 were TCC plus squamous cell carcinoma and 1 was TCC plus adenocarcinoma. Over-all survival rates (Kaplan-Meier) of 56 surgical cases at 1, 3, 5 years were 92.2, 83.7 and 72.8%, respectively. Combination chemotherapy (M-VAC or CAP) was performed in 9 cases of
metastatic disease
and 1 case of bilateral disease. Of these 10 cases, one achieved complete remission, 2 no change and 7 had progressive disease. Adjuvant chemotherapy was performed in 21 cases after surgery. These 21 patients were of high risk in recurrence either Grade 3 or pT3. However, the 5-year survival rate was 77.3% in these patients. Thus we conclude that the adjuvant chemotherapy in high risk patients was effective in our cases.
...
PMID:[Long-term results of surgical treatment for renal pelvic and ureteral tumors]. 853 70
This report describes the surgical management of 24 patients with concurrent abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) and urinary tract neoplasm. The patient population consisted of 22 men and two women whose average age was 65.5 years. AAA sizes ranged from 3.1 to 9.0 cm (mean 5.2 cm) in diameter. Urinary tract neoplasms included transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder (n = 19), adenocarcinoma of the prostate (n = 3), and TCC of the renal pelvis (n = 2). Urologic procedures included radical prostatectomy, radical nephroureterectomy, and radical cystoprostatectomy with continent or ileal loop urinary diversion. The AAA was resected at the time of the urologic procedure in 12 patients (group I) or prior to the urologic procedure in five patients (group II) and was left in situ in seven patients (group III: AAA diameter 3.1 to 5.5 cm). All patients but one in group I recovered without complications. One patient developed an infection postoperatively as a result of fluid collection anterior to the aortic vascular graft; the fluid was successfully drained and the patient subsequently recovered uneventfully. All patients in group II had a marked retroperitoneal desmoplastic reaction at the time of the urologic procedure as a result of prior aneurysmectomy, which complicated the ureteral dissection. One patient later required an ileal ureteral reconstruction for obliterative fibrosis of the
ureter
. At a mean follow-up of 34 months, no infectious or mechanical complications of the vascular prosthesis occurred in group I or II. Eight patients in group I and two in group II are alive. Three have died of
metastatic disease
and two of myocardial infarction. Of the seven patients in group III, four subsequently required AAA resection for an increase in AAA size and three have died.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Concurrent abdominal aortic aneurysm and urologic neoplasm: an argument for simultaneous intervention. 854 Nov 90
We describe our experience with laparoscopic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection in 19 patients with non-seminomatous germ cell tumors. Twelve patients had stage I disease with no clinical evidence (CT-scan, ultrasound, tumor markers) of
metastases
; 7 patients (stage IIb=2, stage IIc=5) had residual tumor after chemotherapy but with negative tumor markers. A laparoscopic dissection was used to asses more fully the pathologic status of the relevant retroperitoneal lymph nodes of both groups. The patient was positioned and trocars introduced at sites similar to that used for transperitoneal laparoscopic nephrectomy (flank position, five ports - 3 x 10 mm; 2 x 5 mm). After reflecting the colon anteromedially, the landmarks of the lymph node dissection were isolated-namely the
ureter
, aorta, inferior vena cava, and both renal veins. The lymph node dissection included the paracaval, interaorto-caval, upper preaortic, and right common iliac zonal nodes for right-sided tumors, and paraaortic, upper preaortic zones for left-sided tumors. Retrieval of the lymph nodal chains was accomplished using a small organ bag. The mean duration of the procedure was 298 (range 150-405) minutes. In only one patient was a lymph node positive for tumor (stage I). Otherwise nodes showed extensive necrosis (after chemotherapy). No intraoperative complications were encountered but three patients developed a delayed complication (ureteral stenosis, pulmonary embolism, and retrograde ejaculation, respectively). Whereas we completed the dissection in each patient with stage I tumors, the laparoscopic procedure was more difficult in patients with stage II tumors after chemotherapy. In two patients with stage IIb disease laparoscopic lymphadenectomy was successful. In four other patients parts of the dissection had to be done after conversion to an open (conventional) operation using a small incision (suprainguinal or pararectal); in one patient the laparoscopic approach was abandoned and converted to an open operation. In the post-chemotherapy group the outcome depended primarily on the tumor bulk prior to drug treatment. In two patients in whom all residual necrotic tissue was removed laparoscopically they had "minor" disease (stage IIb); the others had stage IIc tumors. Our preliminary experience suggests that a modified laparoscopic lymph node dissection is feasible for stage I tumors and in selected patients with marker negative residual tumor after chemotherapy (stage IIb).
...
PMID:Retroperitoneal laparoscopic lymph node dissection for staging non-seminomatous germ cell tumors before and after chemotherapy. 872 78
Four cases of urothelial carcinoma following pelvic irradiation for carcinomas of the cervix uteri (n = 3) and the ovary (n = 1) are reported. The urothelial carcinomas developed 26.8 (mean) years after radiotherapy and invaded the bladder in 3 patients and the
ureter
in 1. Despite radical surgery, the patients died of
metastatic cancer
.
...
PMID:Radiation-induced urothelial carcinoma. 877 26
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