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

Back pain, one of man's most common afflictions, can be caused by a wide variety of disorders ranging from exercise-induced lumbar strain to spinal cord compression by metastatic tumor. A rational approach to the diagnosis and management of the patient with back pain allows the physician to treat self-limited disorders without excessive workup while identifying those patients with malignant disease sufficiently early to prevent permanent neurological damage.
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PMID:Back pain and epidural spinal cord compression. 295 Feb 89

The cases of 28 patients with neoplastic spinal cord compression were reviewed. The most common presenting symptoms were: back pain (68%), bilateral leg weakness (61%), urinary retention (36%), and bilateral leg numbness (32%). Twelve patients (43%) had known neoplastic disease prior to diagnosis of spinal cord compression. Only two patients (7%) were diagnosed within one week of the onset of major spinal symptoms. The commonest symptoms associated with delay in diagnosis were again back pain (50%) and bilateral leg weakness (38%). However, when certain symptoms were present, diagnosis was almost always delayed, particularly with unilateral leg weakness or pain (100%), ataxic gait (80%), and back pain (68%). Symptoms in the neck, chest, and arms were also always associated with delayed diagnosis.
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PMID:Presenting symptoms of neoplastic spinal cord compression. 296 49

Back pain, despite its prevalence, often presents a diagnostic dilemma. Infection, degeneration, and neoplasm comprise major etiologic categories of severe nonspecific back pain. Diagnostic evaluation includes plain roentgenograms, computerized tomography, and radionuclide studies, all of which are often equivocal or misleading. We retrospectively analyzed 21 presentations of severe back pain of various causes evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in addition to conventional diagnostic imaging modes. A characteristic MRI pattern of both the lesions's distribution and its signal intensity was observed that delineated each etiologic category. MRI was found to be particularly suited for use in the differential diagnosis of nonspecific back pain.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of severe back pain using MRI. 297 81

We experienced 22 cases of spinal intramedullary tumor, in which 5 cases were accompanied with exophytic growth. We discussed their clinical and radiological features, and therapeutic problems. Concerning the locations of tumors with exophytic growth, the most common site was conus medullaris, accounting for 60% (3 cases). Histopathological findings were astrocytoma in two cases, and in one case, mixed glioma, ependymoma and hemangioblastoma. In neurological observation, the most common initial symptom was back pain and lumbago, suggesting root pain. No neurological features distinguishable from those of extramedullary tumors were presented. In radiological examination, myelography and CT myelography were very helpful for diagnosis. Myelography and CT myelography showed extramedullary mass, shift and deformity of spinal cord that was not serious as compared with the size of extramedullary mass, and showed the portion where the spinal cord was swollen. Good outcomes were obtained in a case with total removal, and two cases with subtotal and partial removal that were managed with additional irradiation and chemotherapy. However recurrence and intracranial seeding made prognosis poor in two cases where total removal was impossible. We thought that postoperative careful follow-up was necessary not only to detect recurrence but also to detect intracranial seeding in the cases of spinal intramedullary tumor with exophytic growth.
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PMID:[Spinal intramedullary tumor with exophytic growth]. 297 24

Fifteen patients with histologically confirmed pancreatic carcinoma, without evidence of gastroduodenal invasion or obstruction, were prospectively studied to determine the frequency of gastric emptying disorders as determined by a solid-phase gastric emptying study. Nine of these (60%) had gastric emptying curves more than two standard deviations below normal mean values. The majority of patients did not have symptoms of gastric stasis. Nausea and/or vomiting was present in 33% of patients with abnormal gastric emptying and in none of those with normal emptying. Abdominal and/or back pain was present in 8/9 with delayed gastric emptying and in 3/6 with normal emptying. Disordered gastric emptying did not correlate with tumor stage, histology, location, or hyperbilirubinemia. Delayed solid-food gastric emptying may be responsible for the nonspecific abdominal complaints that occur during the course of pancreatic carcinoma, although more frequently, gastroparesis exists on a subclinical level.
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PMID:Pancreatic carcinoma is associated with delayed gastric emptying. 300 47

Twenty-three patients with pancreatic cancer who survived greater than or equal to 3 years after surgical treatment and 56 who survived less than 12 months were studied. The association of steatorrhea with long survival was significant (p less than 0.05), and the association of back pain with short survival showed a trend toward significance (p = 0.06). Other presenting symptoms, as well as the age, sex, or past medical history of the patients; the gross morphology of the tumor and regional lymph nodes; the operations performed; and the use of postoperative adjuvant therapy had no significant influence on survival. Certain histopathologic characteristics of the resected specimens were significantly associated (p less than 0.05) with a poor prognosis: malignant infiltration of the pancreatic capsule, proximity of the tumor to lymphatic and blood vessels, a round-cell infiltrate at the tumor margin, and epithelial atypia in the uninvolved pancreatic ducts. The association of Broders' grades 3 and 4 in the primary tumor and metastases to lymph nodes showed a trend toward significance with short survival. Multivariate analysis confirmed that the associations of Broders' grades 3 and 4 in the primary tumor, a round-cell infiltrate at the tumor margin, and atypia of the pancreatic ductal epithelium with short survival were statistically significant.
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PMID:Factors influencing survival after resection for ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. 300 74

A 20-year-old woman died suddenly in a hospital emergency room after presenting with nausea, vomiting, back pain, and hypertension. At autopsy, an extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma (paraganglioma) of the organs of Zuckerkandl was found, with microscopic focal myocardial necrosis similar to that described in death from adrenal pheochromocytomas. Tumors of the organs of Zuckerkandl are extremely rare; less than 100 such cases have been reported in the world's literature, and only six, including the present case, have presented as a sudden, unexpected death. The symptoms of catecholamine storm may mimic those of acute drug intoxications, leading to misdiagnosis by both clinical physicians and pathologists.
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PMID:Sudden death due to a paraganglioma of the organs of Zuckerkandl. 301 64

A 54-year-old man was admitted to our hospital complaining of back pain and right hypochondrial pain. Ultrasonography and celiac angiography revealed a large tumor sized 9.4 X 8.1 cm. The tumor appeared hypervascular on angiogram. During the second angiography, an attempt at superselective hepatic angiography for the purpose of infusing a combination of Adriamycin and Lipiodol, spasm of the celiac artery occurred. High fever continued for 11 days after the spasm and serum transaminase was elevated. At the third angiography, the nature of the tumor was seen to have changed remarkably to one of hypovascularity. Percutaneous transhepatic tumor biopsy was done. Pathological diagnosis was necrosis of hepatocellular carcinoma. Due to heart disorders, ligation of the right hepatic artery was performed instead of hepatic resection. Postoperatively, the size of the tumor decreased further. It is thought that this patient had a tendency to suffer from vasospasm and that the tumor had a relatively low resistance to ischemia.
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PMID:[A case of necrosis of a hepatocellular carcinoma, caused by spasm of the celiac artery]. 303 94

Two cases of primary pulmonary artery sarcoma are reported. The patient in the first case was a 61-year-old male with a two-year history of cough and exertional dyspnea, who died of intractable cardiac failure two months after admission without establishment of a diagnosis related to the etiology of cardiac failure. Autopsy revealed a sessile tumor within the pulmonary trunk and a solitary metastatic lesion in the lung. Histologic, immunohistochemical and electron microscopic studies were performed and a diagnosis of malignant mesenchymoma was made. The patient in the second case was a 32-year-old male complaining of exertional dyspnea and back pain. Radiologic studies indicated a mediastinal tumor involving the pulmonary artery. Exploratory thoracotomy revealed that the mediastinal mass arose from the left pulmonary artery. He died of respiratory failure 26 months after onset of his initial symptoms. Histologic, immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies of both surgical and autopsy materials revealed a malignant fibrous histiocytoma. One hundred ten previously reported cases of this tumor are reviewed, and its clinicopathologic and morphologic features and probable histogenesis are discussed.
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PMID:Primary pulmonary artery sarcoma. Report of two autopsy cases studied by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy, and review of 110 cases reported in the literature. 305 9

A case of spinal dumbbell shaped melanotic schwannoma was reported. A 58-year-old housewife had a 3-months history of progressive gait disturbance. She also complained of mild backache and numbness in both legs. Her family history was not remarkable. When examined on admission, October 10, 1982, mild weakness of both legs with spasticity and sensory impairment below the level of T10 dermatome without sacral sparing were evident. Her deep tendon reflexes were hyperactive on both sides and plantar responses were extensor bilaterally. Sphincteric disturbance was not significant. The function of her cranial nerves was intact. She had neither cutaneous lesions, abdominal mass nor organomegaly. Thoracic plain X-rays revealed erosion of the right side vertebral body and pedicle of the 10th thoracic vertebra. Myelography disclosed a complete block at the same level by an epidural mass. On CT-myelogram, soft tissue density mass compressing the thoracic cord was apparent in the right epidural space of the spinal canal which extended to the paravertebral region through the right intervertebral foramen. Partial destruction of the body and the right side pedicle was easily recognized. Laminectomy from T9 to T11 exposed a large extradural mass which was encapsulated, elastic soft and pigmented in nature. The tumor was dumbbell shaped and extended to the right paravertebral region through the intervertebral foramen. Costotransversectomy was performed to excise the mass entirely. Following the total removal of the tumor, internal fixation was carried out by means of Harrington instrumentation with methylmethacrylate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Spinal melanotic schwannoma: report of a case]. 306 Jul 51


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