Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 64-year-old woman experienced an episode of disorientation in relation to time, place, and people, as well as of visual defect and impaired balance. Physical examination showed a bitemporal hemianopsia and truncal ataxia. Computerized tomography of the skull revealed a sellar mass consistent with the diagnosis of pituitary adenoma. The patient progressively lost consciousness and died. At postmortem examination, a pituitary neoplasm with arachnoid metastases was present. Metastatic cervical lymph nodes were also detected. Histologic aspects of the primary tumor and of lymph node metastases were quite similar. Immunohistochemical investigation revealed the epithelial origin of the neoplasm and failed to disclose endocrine activity. At ultrastructural examination, the cells of the primary tumor and of the metastases lacked specific granules. These findings support the evidence of a primary metastasizing pituitary carcinoma.
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PMID:Endocrine inactive pituitary carcinoma metastasizing to cervical lymph nodes: a case report. 381 1

A patient presented with facial diplegia, occulomotor paresis, ataxia, areflexia and albuminocytologic dissociation. Such clinical features mimicked Fisher's syndrome. In fact, these signs were due to two metastases, one in the pons, the other in the right frontal lobe.
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PMID:[Ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and areflexia in frontal and pontine metastases simulating Fisher's syndrome]. 382 11

Abetalipoproteinemia (ABL [Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome]) is characterized by marked hypolipidemia with absence of low-density lipoproteins, fat-soluble vitamin deficiency, spinocerebellar ataxia, and retinitis pigmentosa. Our patient had ABL, severe neurologic disease, and spinal cord malignancy, as well as disseminated CNS and extraneural metastases. It is possible that patients with this disorder and long-standing fat-soluble vitamin deficiency may have increased risk for CNS malignancy.
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PMID:Abetalipoproteinemia and metastatic spinal cord glioblastoma. 632 13

Metastasis to the brain or spinal cord parenchyma is extremely rare in cases of neuroblastoma. We present a 3-year-7-month-old boy with neuroblastoma, stage IV, with intraspinal metastasis. He had no neurologic manifestation except incontinentia urinae and ataxia at the terminal stage. His cranial computed tomography scan showed high density areas in both cerebellar hemispheres which seemed to be distant metastatic masses. At autopsy, the metastases in the cerebellum were found to be due to dural infiltration but in the spinal cord parenchyma of the lumbar spine metastases were detected macroscopically. There were multiple distant metastatic areas near the roots, anterior and posterior. The neuroblastoma seemed to have spread along the roots by direct invasion from the meninges. In the future, the number of patients with metastasis into the brain or spinal cord parenchyma will increase because patients with progressive disease could live for a long time as a result of intensive chemotherapy. Observation of these cases will be helpful to clarify the routes of metastasis to these areas.
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PMID:Intraspinal metastasis of neuroblastoma--report of a case detected at autopsy. 664 87

We document a case of a patient who had been treated for a medullary cell carcinoma of the thyroid three years previously and who presented with a three month history of ataxia, weakness and headache. A CT scan showed contrast enhancing lesions in the posterior fossa. An MIBG uptake scan showed that there was some uptake in the cerebellar lesions; however, it was not sufficient to rely on this alone for treatment. The larger of these lesions was therefore surgically resected. Immunocytochemistry, using CAM 5.2, CEA and chromogranin, demonstrated a positive reaction which strongly favoured a diagnosis of metastases from a medullary cell carcinoma of the thyroid. However, absolute confirmation of the diagnosis was obtained using immunocytochemistry with calcitonin. Medullary cell carcinomas of the thyroid usually spread locally and metastasis to the brain has never before been reported.
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PMID:Medullary cell carcinoma of the thyroid: metastases to the central nervous system. 778 10

The history, clinical signs and radiographic and ultrasonographic findings in 16 dogs with pancreatic neoplasia were reviewed retrospectively. Thirteen of the dogs had islet cell carcinoma compatible with insulinoma, one had a pancreatic adenocarcinoma and two had secondary invasion of the pancreas, one by a gastric carcinoma and one by an intestinal lymphoma. The clinical signs in the 13 dogs with insulinoma included collapse in 10 dogs, ataxia in seven, weakness in five, and seizures in two. Two of the 16 dogs had jaundice due to biliary obstruction by the primary tumour or metastases. The sensitivities for pancreatic neoplasia were three of 16 (19 per cent) for radiography and 12 of 16 (75 per cent) for ultrasonography; the sensitivities for metastasis were two of 11 (18 per cent) for radiography and six of 11 (55 per cent) for ultrasonography. Biliary obstruction was detected by ultrasonography in both affected dogs.
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PMID:Ultrasonography of pancreatic neoplasia in the dog: a retrospective review of 16 cases. 853 34

Choroid plexus papillomas can metastasize to the subarachnoid space, but extensive metastasis has only been reported when the tumors are malignant. The authors report a case of diffuse, extensive metastasis to the craniospinal leptomeninges from a benign fourth ventricular choroid plexus papilloma in an adult. This 19-year-old woman presented with a 2-year history of headache, blurred vision, diplopia, and ataxia. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and spinal cord revealed obstructive hydrocephalus caused by a 4-cm, partially calcified, inhomogeneously enhancing tumor of the fourth ventricle that was displacing the pons, medulla oblongata, and cerebellum. Innumerable cystic lesions of varying size were also seen in the cranial and spinal leptomeninges. Histological examination of the resected fourth ventricular tumor and of a few of the leptomeningeal lesions revealed a benign choroid plexus papilloma and leptomeningeal choroid plexus cysts. This singular case of diffuse and extensive metastasis to the craniospinal leptomeninges from a histologically benign fourth ventricular papilloma adds to the available information about the biological potential of these tumors and expands the differential diagnosis of posterior fossa lesions with subarachnoid metastasis.
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PMID:Diffuse craniospinal seeding from a benign fourth ventricle choroid plexus papilloma. Case report. 952 24

Three patients with hydrocephalus secondary to central nervous system (CNS) metastases from lung or breast cancer are reviewed representing less than 5% of patients with CNS metastases seen at The Cancer Center of Boston over a 10-year period. The clinical picture is characterized by ataxia and mental confusion with dilated ventriculi on computed tomography (CT) scan of the brain. Computerized tomography of the brain and microscopic analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid are complementary in establishing the diagnosis of meningeal carcinomatosis. Surgical management by ventricular peritoneal shunt is an important component to multimodality therapy. The clinical course and extended survival in three patients provides a basis for recommending palliative surgical bypass as a therapeutic intervention with or without intrathecal chemotherapy, radiation, or both.
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PMID:Malignancy-related hydrocephalus: clinical features and results of ventricular peritoneal shunt procedure in three patients. 970 35

From Jan. 1993 to Sept. 1995 23 patients suffering from brain metastases from renal cell carcinoma were treated with the Leksell Gamma Knife at the University of Vienna. At the time of diagnosis 13 patients had single and 10 patients presented with multiple metastatic lesions with a total of 44 metastases in MRI scans. Median tumour volume was 5500 cmm (range 100-24000 cmm). Predominant neurological symptoms and signs were different forms of hemiparesis, focal and generalized seizures, cognitive deficit, headache, dizziness, ataxia and CN XII paresis. Fourteen patients received Gamma Knife Radiosurgery (GKRS) with a median dose of 22 Gy (range 8-30 Gy) at the tumour margin. Nine patients underwent a combined treatment of a radiosurgical boost with a median dose of 18 Gy (range 10-22 Gy) at the tumour margin followed by Whole Brain Radiotherapy (total dose 30 Gy/2 weeks). In 20 patients tumour volume reduction up to 30% of the primary tumour volume was found after 4 weeks, evaluated on CT or MRI. A total remission was seen in 4 cases 3 months after GKRS. We achieved a local tumour control of 96%. Rapid neurological improvement after GKRS was seen in 17 patients. The median survival time was 11 months; the one-year actual survival in this unselected group was 48%. Five long term survivors were still alive, 18 patients had subsequently died, 15 of them of general tumour progression. GKRS induces a significant tumour remission accompanied by rapid neurological improvement and therefore provides the opportunity for extended high quality survival. Neither local tumour control was improved nor CNS relapse free survival was prolonged significantly by additional WBRT.
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PMID:Gamma-knife radiosurgery for brain metastases of renal cell carcinoma: results in 23 patients. 975 21

Stereotactic radiosurgery (SR) is being used with increasing frequency in the treatment of brain metastases. This study provides data from a clinical experience with radiosurgery in the treatment of cases with multiple metastases and identifies parameters that may be useful in the proper selection and therapy of these patients. From January 1993 to April 1997, 97 patients (43 women and 54 men; median age 58 years) suffering from multiple brain metastases (median 3; range 2-4) in MRI scans, received SR with the Gamma Knife. The median dose at the tumor margin was 20 Gy (range 17-30 Gy). Median tumor volume was 3900 cmm (range 100-10,000). Different forms of hemiparesis, focal and generalized seizures, cognitive deficit, headache, dizziness and ataxia had been the predominant neurological symptoms. Major histologies included lung carcinoma (44%), breast cancer (21%), renal cell carcinoma (10%), colorectal cancer (8%), and melanoma (7%). The median survival time was 6 months after SR. The actual one-year survival rate was 26%. In univariate and multivariate analysis, a higher Karnofsky performance rating and absence of extracranial metastases had a significantly positive effect on survival. Local tumor control was achieved in 94% of the patients. Complications included the onset of peritumoral edema (n = 5) and necrosis (n = 1). SR induces a significant tumor remission accompanied by neurological improvement and, therefore, provides the opportunity for prolonged high quality survival. We conclude that radiosurgical treatment of multiple brain metastases leads to an equivalent rate of survival when compared to the historic experience of patients treated with whole brain radiotherapy. Patients presenting initially with a higher Karnofsky performance rating and without extracranial metastases had a median survival time of nine months. Each such case should therefore be evaluated based on these factors to determine an optimal treatment regimen.
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PMID:Prognostic factor analysis for multiple brain metastases after gamma knife radiosurgery: results in 97 patients. 1042 Oct 75


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