Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The arteriographic findings in two cases of
hemangiosarcoma
of the spleen with liver metastases are described. These are the second and third reported cases of angiographically demonstrated malignant splenic tumors of vascular origin. Despite the absence of tumor vessels, there were multiple vascular takes in the arterial through the venous phase, mimicking benign cavernous hemangioma. Multiple
metastases
in the liver were the only clue to malignancy. Arteriography combined with liver-spleen scintigraphy not only provides information which is valuable in the preoperative diagnosis but also aids in management of the patient.
...
PMID:Hemangiosarcoma of the spleen and liver metastases: angiographic manifestations. 55 5
In a review of cases of neoplasia in dogs seen at The Animal Medical Center during a 6-year period, 20 cases of primary urethral tumors were found. The majority of these cases were in older dogs (av abe, 10.4 years) and females (18/20). The most common clinical signs were hematuria and stranguria. Nineteen of the 20 tumors were diagnosed clinically, and the most consistent and useful diagnostic method was pneumocystography-cystography, with voiding urethrography. Of the 5 tumor types (squamous cell carcinoma, transitional cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma,
hemangiosarcoma
, and embryonic rhabdomyosarcoma), squamous cell carcinoma was the most common (12/20).
Metastasis
occurred in 6 of the 20 dogs. Because of metastasis to regional lymph nodes and diffuse extent of the tumor in the urethra in many of the dogs, a caudal abdominal approach for surgical excision is recommended if treatment is attempted.
...
PMID:Primary urethral tumors in dogs. 64 87
Three 6-month-old male beagle dogs were given a solution of 150 microng N-ethyl-N'-nitrosoguanidine (ENNG)/ml to drink ad libitum for 9 months. They all developed esophageal squamous cell carcinomas and gastric adenocarcinomas. The stomach adenocarcinomas were mostly in the antrum along the lesser curvature and were either well differentiated or poorly differentiated, with or without signet ring cells. The well-differentiated adenocarcinomas metastasized to the liver, and the poorly differentiated ones metastasized to the lymph nodes. The gastric mucosa in the antrum was atrophic, and the muscularis mucosae was fibrotic. Esophageal lesions were multicentric moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinomas, and they developed without diffuse hyperplastic changes of the epithelium. One dog with a large ulcerated carcinoma of the esophagus had
metastases
in the lung, liver, peritoneum, and abdominal lymph nodes. One dog also had a
hemangiosarcoma
with hepatic metastasis and spindle cell sarcoma in the stomach and duodenum, respectively.
...
PMID:Esophageal and gastric cancers with metastases induced in dogs by N-ethyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. 86 55
A 76-year-old man with spontaneous rupture of a
hemangiosarcoma
of the spleen, together with a review of 49 previously reported patients with splenic
hemangiosarcoma
are presented. Twenty-three were women and 27 were men. All but 3 were adults. Fiften were 50-59 years of age. The symptomatology was nonspecific. Three patients developed microangiopathic hemolytic anemia. Spontaneous rupture occurred in 17 cases (34%).
Metastases
occurred in 42 cases; they were primarily hematogenous and most often in the liver. Lymph node involvement, however, was present in 13 cases. The prognosis of untreated splenic
hemangiosarcoma
is poor. Three of 25 patients survived a year or more after the initial onset of symptoms. Splenectomy before rupture is advisable, since 5 of 19 patients survived at least 1-5 years. It is suggested that
hemangiosarcoma
be considered in patients with: 1) splenomegaly without evidence of malignant lymphoma or leukemia, 2) splenomegaly with microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, and 3) unexplained intraperitoneal hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Hemangiosarcoma of spleen with spontaneous rupture. 116 82
Aflatoxin B1 was fed at 2 ppm in the diet to a group of pregnant F344 rats from the time of conception; it was then fed to their offspring until death. This diet was also given to another group of rats 6-7 weeks old for comparison. The survival time of male rats was significantly shorter than that of the female rats of both groups. However, the survival times of rats of the same sex in both groups did not differ significantly. The major causes of death were hepatic neoplasms with matastases, although some early deaths occurred before neoplasms developed. Most deaths were from a malignant hemorrhagic liver tumor, histologically diagnosed as a
hemangiosarcoma
, which caused rupture and hemorrhage into the peritoneal cavity or
metastases
to the lungs. These hemangiosarcomas were readily transplantable and did not produce alpha-fetoprotein. Ultrastructurally, they were composed of poorly differentiated cells resembling endothelial cells. Nodules of hyperplasia induced by aflatoxin B1 sometimes grew large (greater than 1.5 cm), and 2 were transplanted. Approximately 20% of the rats had colon tumors; a few rats had tumors of the kidney, oral cavity, and hematopoietic system.
...
PMID:Effect of lifetime exposure to aflatoxin b1 in rats. 117 88
Seven cases of cutaneous hemangioma and nine of cutaneous
hemangiosarcoma
were diagnosed from biopsy specimens of 15 Domestic Shorthairs of 5,091 cats that were examined by necropsy or biopsy during the 5-year period from 1 January 1986 through 31 December 1990. All but three cats were male. Tumor cells of both hemangiomas and hemangiosarcomas were immunoreactive for factor VIII-related antigen and for vimentin by the avidin biotin peroxidase complex method. In cats with a median age of 10 years, hemangiomas occurred in skin with pigmented hair in six of seven cases without apparent site predilection. These solitary tumors did not recur after excision although one cat (No. 3) subsequently developed cutaneous
hemangiosarcoma
at another site. Seven of nine hemangiosarcomas occurred in dermis and subcutis of the head, usually on the pinna. All five hemangiosarcomas of the head, for which cutaneous pigmentation could be determined, occurred in unpigmented skin. Cats with
hemangiosarcoma
had a median age of 12.5 years at the time of diagnosis.
Metastasis
has not been documented, but
hemangiosarcoma
has recurred, from 1 month to 2 years after excision, in 6/7 cats that were studied.
...
PMID:Cutaneous vascular neoplasia in 15 cats: clinical, morphologic, and immunohistochemical studies. 151 19
Clinicopathological studies of primary malignant chest wall tumor on 16 cases operated between 1962 and 1988 were made. Of 9 osteogenic sarcomas, 8 cases were chondrosarcoma and 1 case was Ewing's sarcoma. Of 7 soft part sarcomas, 2 cases were fibrosarcoma, liposarcoma and neurogenic sarcoma respectively, and one case was
hemangiosarcoma
. Most of the cases had symptoms, such as chest mass and/or chest pain comprehend symptoms for more than one year. The intrathoracic growth of tumor is common, especially in osteogenic sarcoma. The maximum size of tumor was 8.2 cm in a mean diameter. Preoperative histological diagnosis is difficult to make even though various radiologic diagnosis or pathological technique as biopsy or cytology were assessed. And true rate of preoperative diagnosis is limited only 43.8%. Wide resection combined with the tissue distant more than 3 cm length from tumor is recommended and 6 cases underwent combined resection of diaphragm, pericardium or lung. 3 cases underwent chest wall reconstruction using the Marlex mesh and 10 cases were able to direct closure, in 13 cases with ribs resection. The 5 year survival rate of endurable cases was 62.2%, and that of soft tissue sarcoma (68.6%) is better than that of osteogenic sarcoma (41.7%). The recurrent or metastatic rate in high, 7 cases (43.8%), but reoperation was added for 5 cases of local recurrence or for a case of lung metastasis. 5 year survival rate of cases with recurrence or
metastases
is relatively good, 46.8%, especially excellent in 4 cases with recurred lesions after more than 2 years of tumor free interval.
...
PMID:[Clinico-pathological study of primary malignant chest wall tumors]. 221 70
Twenty-one cases in which sarcomas metastasized to the ovaries are reported. The patients ranged from 18 to 79 (average 42) years of age; only five of them were over 50 years old. Eleven tumors were primary in the uterus and 10 outside the genital tract. Three uterine tumors were leiomyosarcomas, and eight, endometrial stromal sarcomas. The extragenital primary tumors were leiomyosarcoma of the stomach (1) and small intestine (2), retrovesical leiomyosarcoma (1), fibrosarcoma of the anterior abdominal wall (1), sarcoma of the mesentery of smooth muscle or neural type (1),
hemangiosarcoma
probably primary in the heart (1), osteosarcoma of the maxilla (1), chondrosarcoma of the rib (1), and Ewing's sarcoma of the pubic bone (1). The ovarian tumors, most of which were large, were discovered at the same time as the primary tumors in 11 cases; in seven cases, the ovarian tumor was discovered 7 months to 9 years after diagnosis of the primary tumor. In three cases, the ovarian tumors were discovered 4, 7, and 10 months before detection of the primary neoplasm. Two of these tumors were endometrial stromal sarcomas, and one, an epithelioid leiomyosarcoma of the stomach. Eleven ovarian
metastases
were bilateral. On microscopic examination, the greatest difficulty in pathologic interpretation was posed by the metastatic endometrial stromal sarcomas because of their simulation of sex cord-stromal tumors. Features helpful in their distinction from these tumors included the frequent presence of extra-ovarian disease, bilaterality, and a characteristic content of small arteries resembling the spiral arteries of the late secretory endometrium. The other tumor that caused major diagnostic difficulty was the metastatic epithelioid leiomyosarcoma from the stomach, which had a pattern that initially suggested the solid-tubular pattern of a Sertoli cell tumor.
...
PMID:Sarcomas metastatic to the ovary: a report of 21 cases. 237 88
Intramedullary spinal cord metastasis (ISCM) was diagnosed in three dogs with signs of myelopathy. The clinicopathologic features of ISCM in these and previously reported cases in the veterinary and human literature were compared. Myelopathic signs associated with ISCM may be the initial clinical manifestation of malignancy or may develop in the patient with known malignancy. Pain, a frequent manifestation of extradural compressive myelopathy, is not a consistent feature of ISCM. Survey spinal radiographs are usually unrewarding and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) abnormalities nonspecific. Myelography is indicated to differentiate intramedullary lesions from more common extradural compressive lesions. Myelographic interpretation may be difficult, and intramedullary tumors must be differentiated from spinal cord edema or hemorrhage. Evidence of widely disseminated malignancy should increase suspicion for ISCM;
hemangiosarcoma
and lymphosarcoma should be considered the most likely histologic types. CSF cytology may be helpful in the diagnosis of patients with lymphosarcoma. Prognosis is poor due to the frequent presence of disseminated disease, although temporary response to corticosteroid therapy may be achieved. More aggressive therapeutic approaches, such as spinal irradiation and microsurgical resection of
metastases
, have been advocated in humans but have not been reported in the dog. Although it is an uncommon complication of systemic malignancy, ISCM should be considered in the differential diagnosis of myelopathy in the dog.
...
PMID:Intramedullary spinal cord metastasis in the dog. 240 67
A retrospective analysis of 85 dogs with
hemangiosarcoma
(
HSA
) that underwent complete necropsy, including gross examination of the brain, was conducted. Grossly identifiable intracranial lesions were present in 17 dogs. Twelve of 85 dogs (14.2%) had brain metastases. Four of 85 dogs (4.7%) had hemorrhagic lesions and/or ischemic necrosis without identifiable tumor. One dog had a primary central nervous system tumor. Signs of intracranial disease were present in six of 85 dogs (7.1%) with
HSA
; four had brain metastases and two had nonneoplastic lesions.
Metastases
had a propensity for cerebrum and gray matter. Dogs with brain metastases had more widely disseminated disease than dogs without brain metastases (P less than 0.001). Dogs with pulmonary
metastases
were at greater risk for developing brain metastases than dogs without pulmonary
metastases
(odds ratio = 8.31). Although thoracic radiography accurately identified ten of 12 dogs (83%) with pulmonary
metastases
, too few cases were available to assess the applicability/accuracy of thoracic radiography in predicting the presence or absence of brain metastases in dogs with malignancy and signs of intracranial disease.
...
PMID:Intracranial lesions in dogs with hemangiosarcoma. 258 69
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>