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

In MR-imaging, similar to computed tomography, diagnosis of metastatic lymph-node disease is based on lymph-node sizes, and thereby it is non-specific. Super-paramagnetic iron oxide as a potential contrast medium for MR-lymphography accumulate in normal lymph node tissue after endolymphatic, interstitial and, in case of very small particles, after intravenous injection. No accumulation occures in lymph node metastases. Lymph-node metastases can be detected by all three injection techniques. It has been shown experimentally, that in particular small metastases can be detected in normal sized lymph nodes. However, MR-lymphography also has inherent methodologic problems, as there may occure an uneven distribution of the contrast medium between different lymph-node groups. The experimental results with endolymphatic, interstitial, and intravenous MR-lymphography as well as first clinical results with intravenous contrast medium injection are presented and discussed.
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PMID:[Contrast media for magnetic resonance tomographic lymph node diagnosis (MR lymphography)]. 886 30

This series presents six cases of a rare variant of dermatofibroma, characterized by marked clear cell change. All lesions occurred on the lower extremities of middle-aged adults (four women, two men), mostly with the clinical diagnosis of fibrohistiocytic lesion. Histological examination revealed well circumscribed, faintly stained dermal to subcutaneous lesions which were due to the overwhelming presence of clear cells (> 90%), some with prominent PAS-positive cytoplasmic granulation. Overlying epidermal hyperplasia as well as storiform arrangement of spindle cells, sclerotic collagen and some interspersed lympho-histiocytic infiltrate at the periphery of the lesion indicated the fibrohistiocytic origin. Individual histopathological peculiarities included: bizarre giant cells in two cases, perifollicular arrangement and haemangiopericytoma-like features with iron deposition in one case each. Immunohistochemically three of four lesions showed moderate reactivity for factor XIIIa and two of four with an anti-metallothionen marker E9, but were otherwise negative with a broad panel of markers. Electronmicroscopy in two cases revealed large pools of glycogen beside focal, prominent endoplasmic reticulum and lysosomes in some granular cells, but only optically translucent cells in cases of clear cells. Recognition of clear cell dermatofibroma is important as the differential diagnosis includes some entities with more serious outcome/considerations such as metastases of renal cell carcinoma, xanthogranulomatous reactions, balloon cell naevus/melanoma and clear cell sarcoma.
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PMID:Clear cell dermatofibroma. 902 59

Accurate diagnosis of cervical lymph node metastasis is challenging, even with the latest computed tomography or MR equipment and technique. The lack of definitive criteria for distinguishing metastatic from benign nodes is a serious shortcoming of current imaging options. Dextran-coated, ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide is a new MR contrast agent, which accumulates in the reticuloendothelial system of lymph nodes. Small iron oxide particles are taken up by macrophages within normal functioning nodes, reducing their signal on postcontrast MR because of the magnetic susceptibility effects of iron oxide. Metastatic nodes, on the other hand, remain high in signal on postcontrast T2*-weighted gradient echo images. Early clinical experience in cancer patients suggests that iron oxide-enhanced MR lymphography is a valuable imaging technique that may improve diagnostic accuracy for nodal metastases. This article reviews development of superparamagnetic iron oxide compounds, their imaging characteristics, and clinical experience for evaluating head and neck cancer metastases.
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PMID:Iron oxide-enhanced MR lymphography: the evaluation of cervical lymph node metastases in head and neck cancer. 903 96

This study was devoted to tumor differentiation in liver MR T1-weighted imaging with superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO). Twenty-one patients with 40 liver lesions were studied at 1.5 T. Before and at least 45 minutes after SPIO administration, turbo-field-echo (TFE) T1-weighted, TFE T1 x T2*-weighted (MXT), and fat-suppressed turbo-spin-echo T2-weighted images were acquired. A quantitative analysis was performed blindly. On TFE T1-weighted images, the signal enhancement was -33% +/- 12 for the liver, -24% +/- 2 for adenomas and focal nodular hyperplasia, +60% +/- 33 for the hemangiomas; metastases and cyst enhancement were not significant. After SPIO on TFE T1-weighted images, the hemangioma-to-liver signal ratio (149% +/- 18) was definitely higher than the mean metastasis-to-liver signal ratio (90% +/- 16). This T1-related differentiation ability lacked dramatically on TFE MXT images and, in one case, was reduced on post-SPIO TFE T1-weighted images by a long imaging delay after SPIO administration (2 hours).
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PMID:Effects of AMI-25 on liver vessels and tumors on T1-weighted turbo-field-echo images: implications for tumor characterization. 917 31

Two patients with hypochromic microcystic anemia received intravenous iron therapy (Blutal, Yuham Co., An Yang, Korea). These patients demonstrated diffuse hepatic uptake of Tc-99m MDP on bone scintigraphy, which was performed for evaluation of lower back pain in one patient and to rule out skeletal metastases from gastric cancer in the other patient. Blutal is an iron colloid chondroitin sulfate complex and is used to treat iron deficiency anemia in Korea. Phagocytized iron colloid within the hepatic reticuloendothelial system is responsible for the hepatic uptake of Tc-99m phosphate in the two presented cases.
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PMID:Hepatic uptake of Tc-99m MDP on bone scintigraphy from intravenous iron therapy (Blutal). 936 85

Chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (CRCC) may be grossly and microscopically confused with oncocytoma. It is now believed that many, if not all, of the so-called malignant oncocytomas or oncocytomas with metastases reported in the literature were indeed chromophobe renal cell carcinomas. CRCC is characteristically positive for colloidal iron and shows cytoplasmic microvesicles in electron microscopy. This study of CRCC is thought to be the first one done in Latin America. Of a total of 106 renal epithelial neoplasms, 7 (6.6%) fulfilled the criteria for chromophobe renal cell carcinoma. This frequency in Brazil is similar to that in other parts of the world. There was no difference in age, sex, and race distribution of CRCC compared to usual renal epithelial tumors. Grossly, the CRCC ranged in size from 3.5 to 20 cm (average: 10.2 cm) in greatest dimension. Most frequently, the tumor was brown on the cut surface. The growth pattern showed compact areas in all tumors and, in most of the cases, both clear and eosinophilic cellular subtypes were seen. The electron microscopic findings favor an origin of the microvesicles from outpouchings of the outer membrane of mitochondria. The strong positivity for colloidal iron in spite of the destruction of the cytoplasmic vesicles in paraffin-embedded specimens seems to indicate that the acid mucopolysaccharides are not located inside the microvesicles. By the time of diagnosis, only one case had regional lymph node metastases and this particular case was the only one mixed (associated with the usual renal cell carcinoma). The follow-up examination after nephrectomy showed that prognosis seems to be favorable in CRCC, except when the tumor coexists with the usual renal cell carcinoma.
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PMID:Chromophobe renal cell carcinoma: clinicopathological study of 7 cases. 949 Dec 12

Liver-specific MR imaging contrast agents consist of iron oxide particles or specially designed paramagnetic complexes targeting either the reticulo-endothelial system of the liver or the hepatocytes. These agents enhance the relaxation of water molecules in normal liver tissue and are excluded from abnormal tissue, such as metastases. Relaxation enhancement provides a map of normal liver function, increasing conspicuity of focal abnormalities. Understanding the indications and use of these agents is a central challenge for radiologists practicing liver MR imaging.
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PMID:Liver-specific MR imaging contrast agents. 952 Sep 82

A variety of parenterally administered iron oxides have been developed for contrast-enhanced MRI of the liver. Two different classes of iron oxides are currently clinically approved or in phase 3 trials: superparamagnetic iron oxides (SPIO) with a high R2/R1 relaxivity ratio and short blood half-life (AMI-25 and SH U 555 A), and ultrasmall paramagnetic iron oxides (USPIO) with a lower R2/R1 relaxivity ratio and longer blood half-life (AMI-227). All iron oxides significantly increase tumor-to-liver contrast and allow detection of more lesions than unenhanced MRI on T2-weighted images at a field strength of 0.2-1.5 T. Malignant lesions without phagocytic cells exhibit constant signal on T2-weighted accumulation phase images with all three iron oxides. All iron oxides cause a signal decrease of benign lesions with either phagocytic cells or a significant blood pool on T2-weighted accumulation phase images. The signal decrease of benign lesions is proportional to the Kupffer cell activity or tumor vascularity and is useful for lesion characterization. Another enhancement feature for the differentiation of benign from malignant lesions is ring enhancement of malignant lesions (metastases) on T1-weighted enhanced images either during the perfusion phase with SH U 555 A or during the accumulation phase with AMI-227, which is attributed to the blood pool effects of the compounds. Differentiation of lesions and vessels is easier on enhanced images with angiographic effects than on unenhanced images. Iron oxides improve the quality of two-dimensional MR angiography techniques of the portal venous system by decreasing background signal (liver tissue with all iron oxides) and increasing intravascular signal (AMI-227). The use of iron oxides for hepatic MRI provides an alternative to the existing multistep diagnosis with CT, CT portography, MRI and biopsy.
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PMID:Hepatic MRI with SPIO: detection and characterization of focal liver lesions. 972 39

We report on a middle-aged woman who presented with clinical and biochemical findings of insulinoma. Preoperative evaluation by ultrasound, CT, and angiography located the pancreatic lesion but also revealed two focal liver lesions. The latter were interpreted as metastases. MR imaging with injection of superparamagnetic iron oxide particles not only localized the insulinoma but proved to be the only noninvasive technique capable to exclude presence of liver metastases preoperatively. This reversed management to minimal laparoscopic surgery. Recent literature of preoperative imaging evaluation of insulinoma and focal liver lesions is discussed.
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PMID:Insulinoma associated with liver lesions: value of MR imaging. 973 46

The purpose of this study was to compare small and ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide particles (SPIO and USPIO, respectively) as MR contrast agents for the evaluation of focal hepatic disease. In two different patient groups (SPIO [n = 53], USPIO [n = 27]), with focal liver disease (metastases, hepatocellular carcinoma [HCC], hepatocellular adenoma [HCA], and focal nodular hyperplasia [FNH]), spin-echo T1- and T2-weighted images (T1WI, T2WI) were obtained at 1.0T, before and after intravenous contrast administration. The percentage signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) change and lesion-to-liver contrast (LLC) were measured and statistically compared. The liver decreased in signal intensity (SI) after SPIO administration (-28%) and increased after USPIO administration (+16%) on T1WI. On T2WI, the liver decreased in SI on postcontrast images with both agents (-78% SPIO, -73% USPIO). This difference was not statistically significantly different (P < or = .07). Both SPIO and USPIO provided >500% improvement in LLC on T2WI. On T1WI, LLC was increased in metastases (120%) and HCC (325%) with SPIO. Post-USPIO, LLC was increased on T1WI only in metastases (>500%). Both SPIO and USPIO show excellent hepatic uptake, presumed secondary to reticuloendothelial activity, based on the degree of %SI change seen in the liver after administration of contrast on T2WI. However, USPIO preparations exhibit blood pool activity that may aid in further characterization of focal liver lesions, as is evidenced by their greater T1 effect in the liver and in some focal liver lesions.
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PMID:MRI in focal liver disease: a comparison of small and ultra-small superparamagnetic iron oxide as hepatic contrast agents. 978 44


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