Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

After exstirpation of an acoustic neuroma one trends to concentrated on the preservation of hearing and facial function. But how does the surgical removal for an acoustic neuroma, influence the symptoms of tinnitus and vertigo? Our report follows a retrospective evaluation of 78 patients. Based on these results we will also discuss aspects of the origin of these symptoms. Our patients suffered from tinnitus at a rate of 73% preoperatively and 59% postoperatively. With increasing tumor size tinnitus occurred less often, therefore we considered the size of the tumor exclusively. Also, an intraoperative dissection of the cochlear nerve often did not result in an improvement of the symptoms. Vertigo was stated prooperatively in 44% of the cases, postoperatively in 22%. Again as with tinnitus, there was an inverse relationship between the size of the tumor and the severity of the symptoms. In conclusion a deafferention-like syndrome has to be considered as the major causative factor for the tinnitus in patients with acoustic neuromas. However, in the vertigo cases, the symptoms seem to be caused vestibularily due to the increasing tumor and then after a temporary compensation a cerebellar ataxia occurred which the patients often perceive as vertigo.
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PMID:[Effect of microneurosurgical operation in acoustic neurinoma on symptoms of vertigo and tinnitus]. 1087 18

Ataxia telangiectasia is a multisystem disease with an autosomal recessive inheritance. It is characterized by progressive cerebellar ataxia, oculocutaneous telangiectasia, humoral and cellular immunodeficiencies and high incidence of neoplasia and radiosensitivity. A 5 year retrospective survey included 24 patients belonging to 17 families. Cerebellar ataxia was the first clinical symptom and was usually noticed when the child began to walk. Mean age of onset was 2.9+/-1.8 years. Oculocutaneous telangiectasia was present in 17 cases and appeared between 2 and 8 years and then spread in a characteristic symmetrical pattern. When ocular telangiectasia was absent (6 cases), the diagnostic of ataxia telangiectasia was retained on oculomotor apraxia (2 cases), recurrent sinopulmonary infections (3 cases) and/or a sib with typical ataxia telangiectasia (1 case). Recurrent sinopulmonary infections, absence or low serum level of IgA (78 p.100) and lymphopenia revealed immunodeficiency. Among 12 patients, chromosomal instability was observed in 5. Balanced rearrangements involving chromosomes 2, 7, 14, 22, 1, 3 and 11. The responsible gene, ATM, encodes a large protein kinase with a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-like domain. Ataxia telangiectasia patients have a 100 fold higher risk of cancer than the general population. We reported, in the same family two patients who developed neoplasia, (lymphoma and leukemia). During follow-up, a progressive worsening was observed in all cases. Three patients have died.
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PMID:[Clinical, biological and genetic study of 24 patients with ataxia telangiectasia from southern Tunisia]. 1089 97

Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors(MPNSTs) of the acoustic nerve are very rare. Only seven cases of MPNST arising from the acoustic nerve have been reported. The authors present a case of MPNST with divergent cartilage and melanotic differentiation of the acoustic nerve. The patient was a 69 year old man admitted to our neurosurgical service in January 1999 complaining of left facial nerve palsy and hearing difficulty of his left ear. The initial CT showed a tumor at the left cerebellopontine angle region. On MRI the tumor was depicted as low intensity on T 1-weighted image and high intensity on T 2-weighted image, the mass was heterogeneously enhanced after administration of Gd-DTPA. The partial removal of the tumor was performed in January 1999. He was discharged February 1999. But he was admitted again because of progressive cerebellar ataxia. MRI showed the rapid regrowth of the residual tumor. In March 1999, complete removal of the tumor was performed. Histopathological analysis revealed a malignant spindle cell neoplasm with divergent cartilage and melanotic differentiation. We review the relevant literature concerning MPNST of the acoustic nerve and discuss the clinical features of malignant eighth cranial nerve tumor.
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PMID:[Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor with divergent cartilage differentiation from the acoustic nerve: case report]. 1100 86

Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia (ataxia-telangiectasia-like syndrome [AOA]; MIM 208920) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, and choreoathetosis. These neurological features resemble those of ataxia-telangiectasia (AT), but in AOA there are none of the extraneurological features of AT, such as immunodeficiency, neoplasia, chromosomal instability, or sensitivity to ionizing radiation. It is unclear whether these patients have a true disorder of chromosomal instability or a primary neurodegenerative syndrome, and it has not been possible to identify the defective gene in AOA, since the families have been too small for linkage analysis. We have identified a new family with AOA, and we show that the patients have no evidence of chromosomal instability or sensitivity to ionizing radiation, suggesting that AOA in this family is a true primary cerebellar ataxia. We have localized the disease gene, by linkage analysis and homozygosity mapping, to a 15.9-cM interval on chromosome 9q34. This work will ultimately allow the disease gene to be identified and its relevance to other types of autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxias to be determined.
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PMID:Autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia with oculomotor apraxia (ataxia-telangiectasia-like syndrome) is linked to chromosome 9q34. 1102 12

A pregnant 33-year old woman developed nystagmus and cerebellar ataxia. A tumor in the roof of the fourth ventricle was diagnosed. The tumor was subtotally removed using microneurosurgical techniques. The histopathological diagnosis was choroid plexus papilloma (CPP). Twenty-one months later, the tumor recurred and was reoperated. Histologically the tumor displayed now increased mitotic activity and pleomorphism. Radiation therapy of the neuroaxis was performed. Within 59 months, the CPP recurred 3 more times with neuroradiological evidence of extensive spinal seeding. After several palliative irradiations, including 2 gamma-knife boosts, the patient was referred to chemotherapy. She was treated with CCNU (Lomustin) 100 mg/m2 orally (12 cycles, cumulative dosis 1440 mg/m2). Within 42 months, there was no new local recurrence and spinal seeding showed significant regression. Clinically the patient improved and stabilized, but needs continuous support because of persisting severe gait ataxia. The course of disease in our patient provides evidence for therapeutic efficacy of CCNU in recurrent CPP.
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PMID:Evidence of therapeutic efficacy of CCNU in recurrent choroid plexus papilloma. 1121 6

Two anti-neuronal nuclear antibodies (ANNA-1 and ANNA-2) are markers of paraneoplastic neurological autoimmunity related to small-cell carcinoma. ANNA-2 is also related to breast carcinoma. Here we define a third IgG specificity (ANNA-3), identified in 11 patients (10 adults) by immunofluorescence screening of sera from approximately 68,000 patients with suspected paraneoplastic neurological syndromes. ANNA-3 binds prominently to nuclei of cerebellar Purkinje neurons, not to cytoplasm, granular neurons, or enteric neurons, but distinctively to renal glomerular podocytes. Western blots revealed an approximately 170 kDa antigen, in cerebellum and small-cell carcinoma. IgG eluted from this protein reproduced Purkinje and podocyte nuclear staining. ANNA-2 in 8 of 32 cases bound to podocyte nuclei but not to the 170 kDa protein. Healthy subjects and control neurological and cancer patients lack ANNA-3. Neurological accompaniments, subacute and usually multifocal, included sensory/sensorimotor neuropathies, cerebellar ataxia, myelopathy, brain stem and limbic encephalopathy. All of 9 adults followed had an intrathoracic neoplasm, seven biopsied within 7 months (five small-cell lung carcinomas and two adenocarcinomas, one lung, one esophagus) and two imaged, one early, the other 3 years later. Thus, immunohistochemical and Western blot criteria can now identify six IgG markers of neurological autoimmunity related to small-cell carcinoma, their frequency being ANNA-1 > collapsin response-mediator protein-5 > amphiphysin > Purkinje cell cytoplasmic antibody-2 = ANNA-2 = ANNA-3.
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PMID:ANNA-3 anti-neuronal nuclear antibody: marker of lung cancer-related autoimmunity. 1155 86

A 58-year-old male presented with a rare case of brain metastatic bronchogenic carcinoma with human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) production causing cerebellar hemorrhage with symptoms of nausea, vomiting, and headache. Bronchogenic carcinoma manifesting as gynecomastia had been resected a few months previously. Neurological examination revealed left cerebellar ataxia. Neuroimaging showed multiple cerebellar metastases with cerebellar hemorrhage adjacent to the tentorium. Angiography demonstrated tumor staining fed by the hemispheric branch of the left posterior inferior cerebellar artery. Suboccipital craniectomy was performed. The left cerebellar hematoma was evacuated and the tumor was partially removed to prevent massive intraoperative hemorrhage and avoid brain stem injury. Histological examination showed the resected tumor was large cell carcinoma. hCG was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid and was identified by immunohistochemical staining in tumor cells. The primary lesion of bronchogenic carcinoma showed choriocarcinomatous change because the tumor could produce hCG. The choriocarcinomatous cells with higher metastatic potential formed lesions in the brain, and finally intratumoral hemorrhage occurred producing the rapid development of symptoms.
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PMID:Metastatic bronchogenic carcinoma with human chorionic gonadotropin production manifesting as cerebellar hemorrhage--case report. 1156 53

A 53-year-old male, who had undergone a left upper lung lobectomy for cancer 2 years previously, presented with metastatic brainstem tumor manifesting as hearing disturbance. At first an otorhinolaryngologist treated him for senile sensorineural hearing disturbance. However, he suffered gait ataxia and was referred to our department. On admission, neurological examination found mild cerebellar ataxia on the left and gait unsteadiness. Neurootological analysis revealed central-type sensorineural hearing disturbance on the left both in the pure tone audiogram and speech discrimination test. Neuroimaging studies revealed a ring-like enhanced mass centered in the ventral left middle cerebellar peduncle, partly extending to the inferior cerebellar peduncle. Peritumoral edema extending to the ipsilateral cochlear nucleus was recognized. He underwent surgery via a left lateral suboccipital transcondylar approach. The histological diagnosis was adenocarcinoma identical with the primary lung cancer. Intra-axial brainstem metastatic lesion can be a cause of hearing disturbance, so should be included in the differential diagnosis for a patient complaining of hearing disturbance, especially with a past history of cancer.
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PMID:Metastatic brainstem tumor manifesting as hearing disturbance--case report. 1175 11

Ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) syndrome (cerebellar ataxia, oculocutaneous telangiectasias, immunodeficiency, susceptibility to infections, and neoplasia) is associated with cyto- and nucleomegaly in several organ systems. Our aim was to determine (1) whether such cellular abnormalities in the pituitary selectively involve specific cell types, and (2) the proliferation and DNA ploidy status of such cells. Three AT autopsy pituitaries were studied by histology, immunohistochemistry (pituitary hormones, MIB-1, p53 protein), in situ hybridization (pituitary hormones), and Feulgen stain image analysis for ploidy. Results indicated that, in adenohypophyses the scattered pleomorphic, bizarre nuclei were mainly those of somatotrophs and corticotrophs, growth hormone (GH), or adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACm) immunoreactive and expressing the GH or ACTH gene, respectively. Cyto- and nucleomegaly were less frequent in other secretory cells but were also noted in pituicytes of the posterior lobe. Affected cells were immunonegative for MIB-1 and for p53 protein. Image morphometric DNA analysis showed the bizarre cells to be aneuploid with complex histogram patterns, including many nuclei with DNA contents >8 n. No adenomas were found. We conclude that in AT adenohypophyseal cells with cyto- and nucleomegaly, as well as pleomorphism, synthesize and store adenohypophyseal hormones, mainly GH or ACTH. They and affected pituicytes are nonproliferative and are aneuploid.
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PMID:Pituitary Changes in Ataxia-Telangiectasia Syndrome: An Immunocytochemical, In Situ Hybridization, and DNA Cytometric Study of Three Cases. 1211 23

Germinoma cell tumors account for 1% of all primary cerebral tumors. They occur in pineal and in supra-sellar regions, and rarely, in basal ganglia and thalami. Germinoma cell tumors originating in the posterior fossa are very rare. We report a case of primary germinoma found in the cerebellar hemisphere in a 45-year-old immunocompetent man presented with intracranial hypertension and cerebellar ataxia. The CT scan revealed a heterogeneous mass in the cerebellar right hemisphere with a cystic component. Intense and heterogeneous enhancement after contrast infusion was observed. Two other nodules were identified in the frontal and occipital lobe. The pineal region was normal. Total resection was performed. The histological finding were a germinoma. Extensive systemic examination indicated that the intracranial lesion had not metastasized from a primary extracranial tumor.
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PMID:[Cerebellar primary germinoma. Case report]. 1240 21


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