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

A survey of the surgical treatment of 31 patients with metastases in the long bones is presented. Early diagnosis is essential to prevent pathological fractures in patients with a malignancy. Localized bone pain and an abnormal isotope bone scan or X-ray are the most reliable clues to diagnosis. Should a pathological fracture occur, reduction and internal fixation are indicated to keep the patient active and reduce pain. This was performed in 29 of the cases reported here. Fixation prior to fracture was carried out in six patients. The advantage of this strategy is that it reduces both operative risks and duration of hospitalization. Furthermore, it creates a more favourable situation with regard to preoperative diagnostic appraisal and choice of approach to improve the mechanical qualities of the bone involved, thus preserving function and activity.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of pathological fractures caused by bone metastases. 405 77

Radionuclide bone scans were obtained as part of the routine evaluation of 85 patients with renal cell carcinoma. Twenty-nine patients (34%) were found to have metastatic disease at presentation. Bone scans were abnormal in 27 of these 29 patients for a sensitivity of 93 per cent; of the remaining 56 without metastatic disease, 48 had normal bone scans for a specificity of 86 per cent. In all patients whose abnormal bone scans indicated metastatic disease, there were either clinical signs (bone pain), laboratory findings (elevated alkaline phosphatase), or routine radiographic procedures (chest roentgenogram, intravenous pyelogram, or angiogram) suggesting disease metastatic to bone. Although bone scanning was useful for confirming clinically or radiographically suspected metastatic disease, it did not influence the staging of the renal cell carcinoma in any patient. We therefore conclude that bone scans should be used to confirm the presence and to determine the extent of osseous metastases in patients with renal cell carcinoma but are unnecessary as a routine staging procedure.
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PMID:Value of routine radionuclide bone scans in renal cell carcinoma. 406 Mar 82

The biologic effects of stable strontium, a naturally occurring trace element in the diet and the body, have been little investigated. This paper discusses the effects of oral supplementation with stable strontium in laboratory studies and clinical investigations. The extent of intestinal absorption of various doses of orally administered strontium was estimated by determining serum and tissue levels with atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The central observation is that increased oral intake produces a direct increase in serum levels and intracellular uptake of strontium. The results of these studies, as well as those of other investigators, demonstrate that a moderate dosage of stable strontium does not adversely affect the level of calcium either in the serum or in soft tissues. In studies of patients receiving 1 to 1.5 g/d of strontium gluconate, a sustained increase in the serum level of strontium produced a 100-fold increase in the strontium:calcium ratio. In rats, studies indicate that an increase in intracellular strontium content following supplementation may exert a protective effect on mitochondrial structure, probably by means of a stabilizing effect of strontium on membranes. The strontium:calcium ratio in animals receiving a standard diet is higher in the cell than in the extracellular fluid; this may be of physiologic significance.An increase in density that corresponded to the deposition of stable strontium was observed in areas of bone lesions due to metastatic cancer in patients receiving stable strontium supplementation. This suggests the possibility of using strontium to mineralize osteophenic areas and to relieve bone pain. Also, because of reports of an inverse relation between the incidence of dental caries and a high strontium content in drinking water, the use of natural water containing relatively high levels of stable strontium should be considered. In each of these instances it is important to maintain a normal dietary intake of calcium.
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PMID:Effects of oral supplementation with stable strontium. 612 36

Thirty-four normocalcaemic women with multiple osteolytic bone metastases from breast cancer were randomly allocated to treatment with disodium dichloromethylene diphosphonate (Cl2MDP) 1600 mg/day orally (17) or placebo (17) for 3-9 months. Fasting urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine and calcium/creatinine ratios declined in the Cl2MDP group but not in the placebo group. Four patients in the placebo group died from hypercalcaemia. New bone metastases were more common in patients on placebo and these patients also required more analgesic drugs than those on Cl2MDP. Cl2MDP seemed to reduce bone pain and bone resorption and prevent the development of hypercalcaemia caused by osteolytic metastases. The formation of new bone metastases and the growth of old ones seemed to be retarded by Cl2MDP.
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PMID:Long-term controlled trial with diphosphonate in patients with osteolytic bone metastases. 613 Jan 97

In a retrospective study of 254 women with carcinoma of the breast (mean age 55.4 years) the occurrence of bone pain was compared with results of skeletal scanning, skeletal X-ray examinations and routine biochemical findings. Typical signs of skeletal metastases were found in bone scans of 119 patients, 88 (74%) of whom had bone pain. Alkaline phosphatase was elevated in 54 (45%), LDH in 32 (27%), and gamma-GT in 69 patients (58%). There was a statistical correlation between the number of affected skeletal parts and the absolute level of alkaline phosphatase (P less than 0.001) and of LDH (P less than 0.05). Skeletal scans gave no evidence of bone metastases in 36 patients who had bone pains. In this group of patients alkaline phosphatase was elevated in 4, LDH in 1 and gamma-GT in 12 patients. Routine scanning of 254 patients revealed skeletal metastases in 12% without any clinical symptoms. Bone pain and (or) increased activity of alkaline phosphatase occurred in 91% of patients with skeletal metastases. In our view, bone scan in the postoperative control of breast cancer is justified only after onset of clinical symptoms and (or) if there is an abnormally raised alkaline phosphatase activity.
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PMID:[Is routine bone scanning justified during the after-care for breast cancer?]. 614 14

Selective adenohypophysectomy, by the injection of up to 1 ml of absolute alcohol to the pituitary gland, was used to produce pain relief in 25 patients suffering from metastatic cancer. Thirty-five treatments were given and good analgesia was obtained in 74%. The median duration of pain relief was 6-7 weeks, although some treatments produced relief for up to 20 months. The procedure was most successful in relieving bone pain in patients with advanced carcinoma of the breast or prostate. The use of a fine-gauge needle for the intranasal trans-sphenoidal approach to the gland and the injection of alcohol to the anterior part (pars distalis) of the gland reduced the frequency of the major complications diabetes insipidus (17%) and prolonged visual disturbance (3%).
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PMID:Selective hypophysectomy for metastatic pain. A review of ethyl alcohol ablation of the anterior pituitary in a Regional Pain Relief Unit. 617 52

Radiotherapy often is used for palliation of bone pain from metastatic cancer of the prostate but an objective evaluation of its efficacy in a large series of patients is unavailable. We report the results of external beam irradiation in 62 patients who had bone pain secondary to stage D carcinoma of the prostate. The variables used to judge pain before and after radiotherapy included subjective evaluation of pain, status of activity and quantitation of analgesic use. Complete relief of pain was achieved in 26 patients (42 per cent), partial relief in 22 (35 per cent) and no relief in 14 (23 per cent). On the basis of our experience external beam irradiation is useful palliative therapy for pain from metastatic cancer of the prostate.
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PMID:External beam radiotherapy for palliation of pain from metastatic carcinoma of the prostate. 617 95

From 1965 to 1980, 35 patients were treated by radiation for palliation of symptoms related to metastatic renal cell carcinoma. The male:female ratio was 1.9:1. Eighty-six percent (30/35) of the patients were over 40 years of age at initial presentation. Sixty-three percent (22/35) of the patients showed symptoms of metastatic disease within three years of diagnosis of the primary malignancy. Sixty sites were irradiated in the 35 patients: 36 sites of metastatic bone pain, 14 obstructing and/or palpable masses, and ten sites treated for symptoms due to central nervous system (CNS) metastases. Efficacy of treatment was assessed at serial follow-up visits beginning one month after completion of radiotherapy. Bone pain responded at 77% of the treated sites. Mass effect responded in 64%. Disappointing results were obtained with CNS metastases. There was only a 30% response of brain and spinal cord lesions within the dose range that these patients were treated. No correlation between TDF equivalent dose of radiation administered and frequency of palliative response was found. In those sites where a response of bone pain to radiation was observed, 86% of the responses lasted the remainder of the patient's life. No correlation was found between TDF equivalent dose of radiation administered and duration of response. Radiation may be a useful palliative tool for bone pain and mass effect from metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Inordinately high doses need not be used to achieve the desired effect.
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PMID:The role of radiation therapy in the management of metastatic renal cell carcinoma. 618 7

Seventy-nine patients with osseous metastases were prospectively evaluated bone pain. The evaluation of pain has been accomplished using the Keele Scale system. All cases have been treated with radiotherapy. The therapeutic response for analgesic effect has been evaluated in complete response (CR) when total disappearance of pain was present; in partial response (PR) with the reduction of at least 1 point on the Keele Scale: in non-responsive (NR) when patients showed worsening or no change in pain symptomatology during or following therapy. 51.8% have presented complete response, 36.8% partial response and 11.3% no response. The global response (CR + PR) has been 88.6%. This response was evaluated in relation to fractionating daily dose of radiotherapy and minimum dose necessary for analgesia.
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PMID:Pain in osseous metastases: results of radiotherapy. 620 88

Ten women with skeletal metastases from breast carcinoma received dichloromethylene diphosphonate (Cl2MDP), an inhibitor of osteoclast function, in a placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover study. Eight of these patients had either hypercalcemia or hypercalciuria, and all 10 had elevated urinary hydroxyproline levels as evidence of active skeletal disease. Eight patients had moderate to severe bone pain. After eight weeks of oral dichloromethylene diphosphonate treatment (3,200 mg per day), either preceded by or followed by an eight-week placebo period, seven of eight patients with hypercalciuria had significant reductions in urinary calcium levels, and nine of 10 had reductions in urinary hydroxyproline levels (significant in eight) when the dichloromethylene diphosphonate treatment periods were compared with prestudy or placebo periods. Additionally, seven of eight subjects had decreased pain with dichloromethylene diphosphonate. There were no adverse effects other than transient diarrhea in some patients. We conclude that oral dichloromethylene diphosphonate can significantly inhibit osteoclast-mediated bone destruction in patients with bone metastases from breast cancer.
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PMID:Effects of dichloromethylene diphosphonate in women with breast carcinoma metastatic to the skeleton. 621 77


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