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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During the 5-year period between 1988 and 1989, five patients with primary sarcomas of the liver underwent surgery. Since the patients presented in an early stage of the tumor, all the sarcomas were resectable, in three cases with wide margins (R-0 resection). Five histological types were detected: malignant hemangiopericytoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, hemangiosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and embryonal sarcoma. Two patients with high-grade sarcomas received adjuvant chemotherapy. The follow-up was favorable in three patients with R-0 resections (two had adjuvant chemotherapy). They were still alive, with no evidence of disease 30, 46, and 63 months after the diagnosis. The two other patients had to be reoperated on for local recurrences. Both died of their tumor disease, 30 and 35 months after the initial diagnosis. Extensive chemotherapy in one of these cases failed to arrest tumor progression. Hence, liver resection with wide margins is a very important measure in such cases.
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PMID:Primary sarcoma of the liver in the adult. Report of five surgically treated patients. 142 75

Squamous cell carcinoma was the most common neoplasm found in a review of case records of 21 cats with histopathologically confirmed orbital neoplasms. Other neoplasms found were lymphosarcoma, undifferentiated carcinoma, malignant melanoma, adenocarcinoma, fibrosarcoma, chondroma, and hemangiosarcoma. Three (14%) neoplasms were primary, 15 (71%) were secondary, invading the orbit from adjacent tissues, and 3 (14%) were a manifestation of multicentric disease. The most common clinical sign was exophthalmia, followed by chronic epiphora, enophthalmia, and strabismus. Mean survival time after diagnosis was 1.9 months. Ten cats were euthanatized at the time of diagnosis because of extensive disease. Mean survival time of the other 11 cats was 4.3 months. Skull radiography was helpful in diagnosing orbital neoplasms in 8 of 11 cats that had invasion of the orbit by adjacent neoplasms.
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PMID:Orbital neoplasms in cats: 21 cases (1974-1990). 142 40

A tumor was removed from the nose of a 4-year-old Holstein. Hemangiosarcoma was diagnosed on histologic examination. Redevelopment of the tumor necessitated a second surgery. Routine CBC and serum biochemical analysis were normal. Clinical signs of metastasis were not reported by the owner during the next 13 months before the cow was sold for slaughter.
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PMID:Hemangiosarcoma of the external naris in a cow. 142 91

A rodent model of hereditary cancer in which a single gene mutation predisposes rats to bilateral multicentric renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is described. This rat hereditary cancer syndrome shares certain similarities with von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHLD). In addition to the early development of renal epithelial tumors with morphologic similarity to human RCC, rats which bear the RCC gene are predisposed to the development of secondary primary cancers later in life. Splenic vascular proliferative lesions, including hemangiosarcoma, were seen in 23% of 14-month-old rats of both sexes that had renal tumors. At fourteen months of age, 62% of female rats with renal cell tumors had sarcomas of the lower reproductive tract of probable smooth muscle origin. Non-carrier siblings of affected animals did not have renal, reproductive, or splenic neoplasia. The finding of a specific constellation of familial neoplasms, including multicentric bilateral renal cell carcinoma, in this autosomal dominant disorder of rats suggests that this syndrome is analogous to human VHLD. In addition to its usefulness for studies of the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of renal carcinogenesis, this animal model will provide a unique tool to investigate how cancer susceptibility genes interact with environmental risk factors such as chemical carcinogens.
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PMID:Hereditary renal cell carcinoma in the Eker rat: a rodent familial cancer syndrome. 143 48

Between 1957 and March 1991, 106 patients with 110 neoplasms that originated in the heart were treated surgically at the Mayo Clinic and had pathologic material available for review. The study group consisted of 39 male and 67 female patients, who ranged in age from 2 to 80 years. Benign atrial myxomas (64 in the left atrium and 16 in the right atrium) were the most commonly encountered neoplasm. The other benign tumors were nine fibromas, five lipomatous tumors, seven valvular fibroelastic papillomas, and one cardiac hamartoma (so-called oncocytic cardiomyopathy). In addition, eight patients had a primary cardiac malignant lesion: angiosarcoma, leiomyosarcoma, and malignant fibrous histiocytoma in two patients each and sarcoma (not otherwise specified) and osteogenic sarcoma in one patient each. The angiosarcomas originated in the right atrium, and the other malignant tumors originated in the left atrium. The histologic feature that most frequently predicted an adverse clinical outcome was the presence of mitotic figures, although highly cellular tumors and those with necrosis also tended to have a malignant course.
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PMID:Pathology of surgically excised primary cardiac tumors. 143 56

A case of breast angiosarcoma metastatic to the maxillary gingiva is reported. A review of the literature revealed only three previously reported cases. Angiosarcomas often present as benign lesions. The surgeon should maintain a high level of vigilance when patients present with oral lesions and a history of breast tumor.
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PMID:Breast angiosarcoma metastatic to the maxillary gingiva. Case report. 145 26

Hepatocellular carcinoma is a malignant tumor derived from hepatocytes. It is the most frequent of primary liver cancers. In 90% of the cases, it occurs in a cirrhotic liver and is now more and more detected by ultrasonographic screening of cirrhotic patients. Hepatocellular carcinoma can also be diagnosed at a more advanced stage, when complications, such as ascites, jaundice or digestive hemorrhage, occur. CT scan and magnetic resonance imaging are useful to confirm ultrasonographic findings, but angiography with infusion of Lipiodol in hepatic artery followed by CT scan remains the most sensitive method for diagnosis. Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma is derived from intrahepatic bile duct cells and does not occur in a preexisting cirrhotic liver. Diagnosis is usually late. Clinical features are those of hepatic malignancy with jaundice and abdominal pain. Morphological examination of the liver shows an intrahepatic tumor, sometimes associated with a dilatation of the surrounding bile ducts. Other primary malignancies are very rare. Fibrolamellar carcinoma presents as an abdominal mass occurring in a young adult with a non cirrhotic liver. Prognosis is better than that of hepatocellular carcinoma. Cystadenocarcinoma is a cystic tumor of bile ducts that can develop in a preexisting cystadenoma. Angiosarcoma is a highly malignant tumor derived from sinusoidal endothelial cells. Exposure to various carcinogens is found in 30% of the cases. Epithelioid hemangio-endothelioma differs from angiosarcoma by its occurrence in young adults and a more favorable prognosis.
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PMID:[Clinical symptomatology and radiological aspects of primary cancers of the liver]. 145 34

We report a facial tumor that was proven to be a metastatic mesothelioma. The diagnosis was not established pre-mortem. The patient died shortly after the facial biopsy, and an autopsy revealed a large pleural-based mass which had the gross appearance typical of a mesothelioma. Electron microscopic examination of tissue from the pleural tumor was diagnostic for mesothelioma. The patient had extensive visceral metastatic disease. Inclusion of this entity in the differential diagnosis of certain cutaneous tumors is important, in part because this lesion may be confused with angiosarcoma, particularly when it occurs in the skin of the face or head in older patients.
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PMID:Distant cutaneous metastasis of pleural malignant mesothelioma. 148 70

A patient with hepatic angiosarcoma is described. The significant aspects of this malignancy are delineated. This tumor constitutes only 2% of all primary tumors of the liver. The association with exposure to vinyl chloride and other carcinogens is reviewed. Diagnostic and therapeutic modalities are discussed.
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PMID:Hepatic angiosarcoma. 149 20

A case of a distinctive vascular neoplasm of the spleen in a 3-year-old boy is described. The tumor was characterized histologically by a biphasic growth pattern, with discrete nodular areas composed of atypical round, epithelioid cells with large nuclei and prominent nucleoli, and areas showing an intricate proliferation of vascular channels lined by elongated spindle cells. Immunohistochemical studies showed cytoplasmic staining of the tumor cells with factor VIII-related antigen, Ulex europaeus lectin, and vimentin antibodies. Stains for keratin, actin, desmin, lysozyme, and S-100 protein were negative in the tumor cells. Electron microscopy revealed a fairly cohesive population of cells that contained mature and immature cell junctions, basal lamina material, and surface pinocytotic activity consistent with vascular endothelial cells. Five-year follow-up has shown the patient to be alive and free of disease. This case appears to represent a previously unreported primary vascular neoplasm of the spleen showing combined features of epithelioid and spindle-cell hemangioendothelioma. The lesion should be distinguished from other benign and malignant vascular proliferations of the spleen such as Kaposi's sarcoma, angiosarcoma, and the recently described littoral-cell angioma.
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PMID:Epithelioid and spindle-cell hemangioendothelioma of the spleen. Report of a distinctive splenic vascular neoplasm of childhood. 149 19


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