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)

Thirteen adult patients underwent palliative Nd-YAG laser treatment for relief of severe dyspnea due to malignant endotracheal obstruction. Three of the 13 patients had underlying chronic airflow obstruction (CAO) due to diffuse obstructive pulmonary disease. Despite dyspnea, cough, wheezing, stridor and/or hemoptysis, the diagnosis was delayed because of a normal chest roentgenogram in eight patients and nondiagnostic pulmonary function studies (including maximal expiratory and inspiratory flow-volume loops) in all three patients with CAO and in four of ten patients without CAO. The location of the tumor was extrathoracic in two patients, including one with CAO; intrathoracic in seven patients, including two with CAO; and combined extra- and intrathoracic in four. Tracheal diameter increased from 3.5 +/- 1.0 mm before, and to 9.8 +/- 2.0 mm after single or multiple laser treatments. Increased patency of the trachea after laser surgery was associated with improvement in expiratory and/or inspiratory flow rates and with symptomatic relief in all patients which persisted for 14.1 +/- 8.7 months (range four to 48 months). These results indicate that severe symptomatic narrowing of the extra- and/or intrathoracic trachea to a diameter of 2 to 5 mm may not be detected by conventional chest radiography or even by sensitive physiologic tests, especially in patients with underlying CAO. The resultant delay in diagnosis defers possible relief of disabling symptoms with palliative therapy, including Nd-YAG laser photocoagulation.
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PMID:Diagnosis and Nd-YAG laser treatment of unsuspected malignant tracheal obstruction. 245 88

A nine and a half year old boy was brought to the hospital because of a cough, dyspnea and mild fever. He was well-nourished and had an uneventful history. His chest X-ray and electrocardiographic findings suggested pericarditis but further examinations and an open pericardial biopsy revealed a mass histologically diagnosed as pericardial mesothelioma, a very rare tumor in this age group.
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PMID:Pericardial mesothelioma. A pediatric case report. 248 30

Adenoid cystic carcinoma of the tracheobronchial tree in five patients was treated surgically and the clinicopathologic manifestations and histogenesis were examined in detail. Symptoms such as cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis, and atelectasis on chest X-ray were present in four patients, and the other patient was asymptomatic. Histologically, growth patterns were classified as tubular, cribriform, and solid. The solid pattern was the most aggressive with extensive perineural invasion. Immunohistochemically, secretory component, lactoferrin, and epithelial membrane antigen were present in the cells lining the gland-like lumen of tissues with the tubular and cribriform patterns, but was rare in those with a solid pattern. Desmin and S-100 protein were detected in the nonlining cells of tissues with all three patterns. These findings suggest that this tumor originates from the myoepithelial cells of the bronchial gland and that the solid pattern was the most poorly differentiated form.
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PMID:Adenoid cystic carcinoma of the tracheobronchial tree: clinicopathology and immunohistochemistry. 254 Dec 82

Two hundred ten dogs that had primary lung tumors diagnosed between 1975 and 1985 were evaluated. The majority of the tumors were classified as adenocarcinoma (74.8%) and alveolar carcinoma (20%). The most common clinical signs of disease were cough (52%), dyspnea (23.8%), lethargy (18.1%), weight loss (12.4%), and tachypnea (4.8%). The clinical methods that were most successful in directly or indirectly leading to a diagnosis of primary lung tumor were thoracic radiography (77.1%) and cytologic examination of fine-needle aspirate specimens (24.8%).
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PMID:Classification of primary lung tumors in dogs: 210 cases (1975-1985). 254 42

A 53 year old male was admitted with cough, chest pain and bloody sputa for one month. His admission chest radiography revealed a tumor shadow in right hilus. The patient was diagnosed as small cell lung cancer (oat cell type) by transbronchial biopsy. Clinical staging was IIIA and performance status was 1. The patient was treated by combined chemotherapy (CPA, ADM and VCR) for 3 courses and chest irradiation (5,000 rad). After such therapy, the primary site was regressive until 2 months prior to death. One month after irradiation, abdominal CT showed multiple liver metastases. Though CDDP 100 mg/body and etoposide 100 mg/body X5 were administered systemically, improvement of metastases of the liver was not revealed by abdominal CT. However, after hepatic arterial infusion of ADM (10 mg/body) suspended in a lipiodol (3 ml/body) and CDDP (100 mg/body) was performed, liver metastases were remarkably regressive by abdominal CT. The patient died of a systemic relapse about 14 months after liver involvement.
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PMID:[A case of intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy in small cell lung cancer with liver metastases]. 255 17

A 36-year-old man was admitted with cough and sputum. He had cafe-au-lait spots and multiple subcutaneous neurofibromas. Chest X-ray revealed multiple emphysematous bullae in bilateral upper lobes and a tumor in the bulla of the right upper lobe. Needle aspiration biopsy of the tumor showed small cell carcinoma. Although chemotherapy and radiation resulted in decrease in tumor size, it subsequently increased in size and he died 11 months after admission. Including this case there have been 7 reports of Recklinghausen's disease associated with multiple lung cysts and 8 reports with lung cancer in Japan. However, cases with lung cysts and cancer are very rare. The cancer of this case was considered to be associated with emphysematous bulla rather than Recklinghausen's diseases.
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PMID:[A case of Recklinghausen's disease associated with multiple emphysematous bullae and lung cancer]. 255 28

A 47-year-old man was admitted with a cough on January 4, 1986. A chest X-ray film showed a mass shadow in the left lower lung, which was revealed to be a bronchogenic cyst by CT scanning and ultrasonography. Thoracotomy was performed on March 3, 1986 because cytologic tests on the fluid in the cyst suggested malignancy. A cyst, two tumors on the diaphragm and pleural thickening were revealed. Microscopic examination showed a benign bronchogenic cyst and a mixed-type malignant mesothelioma. In spite of chemotherapy (ADR, Cis-DPP, 5-fluorouracil) and immunotherapy (OK-432, PSK), the pleural thickening progressed, as was demonstrated by CT scanning and ultrasonography. Although cardiac tamponade due to invasion by the malignant mesothelioma developed, this was improved by cardiocentesis. The patient died of pneumonia on March 28, 1987. We studied the concentration of mineral fibers in lung and tumor tissues of this case by Energy Dispersive X-ray Analyser because asbestos or non-asbestos inorganic fibers might cause malignant mesothelioma. This case of malignant pleural mesothelioma accompanied by a bronchogenic cyst is very rare.
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PMID:[A case of malignant pleural mesothelioma with infectious bronchogenic cyst]. 258 7

A 72-year-old female underwent successful resection of a giant right atrial myxoma. The patient had slight cough with abnormal cardiac silhouette and elevated ESR. The diagnosis of right atrial myxoma was established by echocardiography and angiography. Venacavography revealed huge mass which occupied in the entire right atrium. This tumor was perfused by well developed feeding arteries arising from both right and circumflex coronary arteries, and showed rich tumor vascularity. This tumor was resected with the interatrial septum and the free wall of the right atrium which were attached with tumor. Interatrial septal defect was closed with a Teflon fabric patch and the defect of right atrial free wall was approximated by direct closure with Z-plasty. Postoperative course was uneventful. Pathological examination showed myxoma without invasion into the resected septum and atrial wall. It is important to prevent tumor embolization to the pulmonary artery or strangulation into the right ventricle during surgery on this type of huge right atrial myxoma.
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PMID:[Successful resection of the right atrial myxoma with excessive tumor vascularity in a elderly patient]. 262 68

Two cases of inflammatory pseudotumor of the lung were reported. Case 1. A 68 year-old man was referred to our hospital because of an abnormal shadow on chest X-ray. He had a history of pneumonia in the right upper lobe five months before. The chest X-ray film revealed a coin lesion in the right upper lung field (S1), the same segment as the previous pneumonia. Although RPF and INH were administered for three months, the shadow did not change, and cough and sputum continued. In order to confirm the diagnosis, open thoracotomy was performed and microscopic findings of the resected tumor showed inflammatory pseudotumor; proliferation of fibrous tissue with infiltration by inflammatory cells (plasma cells, lymphocytes and a few neutrophils). Case 2. A 35 year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of an abnormal shadow on chest X-ray, i.e. a coin lesion with vascular indentation in the left lower lung field (S8). A wedge resection including the mass was performed, and histopathologic examination revealed inflammatory pseudotumor, or plasma cell granuloma; proliferation of fibrous connective tissue with infiltration by predominantly mature plasma cells. Both patients have been doing well after the operation. We also reviewed 46 cases reported in the Japanese literature and discussed various aspects of this disease. Of 10 patients who had a history of previous respiratory tract infection, 8 had histopathologic features with various inflammatory cells, including many lymphocytes, as in our Case 1. Although the common etiology of inflammatory pseudotumor is obscure, we suppose that in some cases the lesion may be a result of post-inflammatory repair process.
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PMID:[Two cases of inflammatory pseudotumor of the lung]. 262 11

A primary chondrosarcoma arising in the left inferior lobar bronchus is described in a 67-year-old man. The symptoms upon admittance were dyspena, cough with purulent sputum and weight loss. The tumor was removed by pneumonectomy. Eight months later the patient died of massive mediastinal lymph node involvement. While tracheobronchially located primary pulmonary chondrosarcoma tends to remain localized, the peripheral variety tends toward mediastinal lymph node involvement and thoracic metastasis. The treatment of choice is resection in a radical manner, whenever possible.
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PMID:Primary chondrosarcoma of the left inferior lobar bronchus. 263 54


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