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)

We here report a 17-year-old high school boy having suprasellar germinoma who presented marked hypernatremia probably due to damages of both the osmoregulation and thirst centers. He was in good health until July, 1996, when he noticed slight general malaise and complained of dryness of the mouth, but without polyuria. He was found to have hypernatremia of mild degree (serum Na 151 mEq/l), but dropped out from the follow-up. In April, 1997, he was admitted to our hospital with complaints of general malaise and weakness of the upper and lower extremities. Serum Na was high at 202 mEq/l with a plasma osmolality of 390 mOsm/kg H2O. He completely lacked a sense of thirst and polydipsia/polyuria. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging indicated a suprasellar tumor, possibly a germinoma. Hypernatremia was first treated with intravenous infusion of a half-normal saline solution, followed by immediate polyuria of 3 to 6 l/day. Subsequently, nasal administration of desamino-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) induced stabilization of serum Na to a range between 140 and 160 mEq/l. The tumor disappeared following steroid pulse therapy and irradiation of 50 Gy to the brain. At the time of discharge, he and his family were instructed to record the urine volume, amount of water intake, body weight and amount of DDAVP used. The patient was instructed to drink water corresponding to the urine volume while maintaining the dose of DDAVP. One year after treatment, the water balance reverted to a positive direction, leading to a normal range of serum Na probably because of partial recovery of the osmoreceptors and/or trained drinking habit. This case illustrates the so-called adipsic hypernatremia which is attributed to partial osmoreceptor destruction by a suprasellar germinoma.
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PMID:[Marked hypernatremia in suprasellar germinoma lacking a sense of thirst]. 1065 29

Primary hyperparathyroidism is a rather frequent pathology characterised by hypersecretion of parathormone (PTH) which is caused by adenomas in 85% of all cases. At clinical onset, the most common symptoms are hypercalcemia-related (pain due to kidney stones, polyuria, gastrointestinal and neurological disorders) while rarer symptoms are due to brown tumors, expansive lesions often found in fibro-cystic osteitis. A case in which the patient showed recurrent mandibular brown tumors as initial clinical symptoms of primary hyperparathyroidism is described. This patient was examined for hypercalcemia, and a tumor mass at the left inferior mandibular branch was found. The patient had undergone surgical removal of a tumor in the left mandibular some years before, which was diagnosed as osteoclastoma. Primary hyperparathyroidism was diagnosed during recovery, and surgical removal of the parathyroid adenoma and mandibular tumor was performed. A histological diagnosis of large cell brown tumor was made. A microscopic observation of brown tumors which are made up of large multinuclear osteoclastic cells can often be confused with other large cell tumors during diagnosis. It is therefore necessary to exclude the presence of hyperparathyroidism with ionised calcium and, in cases of high values, intact PTH (iPTH), before performing a histological diagnosis of a large cell bone tumor. Throughout the course of primary hyperparathyroidism, brown tumors might appear in the absence of other specific symptoms and localize at the level of a single bone segment.
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PMID:[Recurrent brown tumors as initial manifestation of primary hyperparathyroidism. An unusual presentation]. 1108 46

We report on a 33-year-old patient from Sri Lanka who had been suffering from recurrent episodes of abdominal cramps since he was ten years old. He additionally suffered from postprandial flatulence and an increased frequency of bowel movements. By the age of 24, his condition had worsened with polyuria and polydipsia and he was diagnosed with type II diabetes mellitus. Recently, the patient's compliance deteriorated steadily and his diabetes mellitus was uncontrolled. His flatulence continued and he had six to seven bowel movements daily. He presented to us with renewed bouts of severe stomach cramps, similar to the painful episodes that the patient experienced in his youth. After exclusion of other etiologies and judging by the clinical picture, the patient's origin and the sonographically and radiologically verified pancreatic calcification, we rendered the diagnosis of a tropic calcifying pancreatitis with secondary diabetes mellitus. According to the literature, malignant neoplasia may develop on the basis of this disease. However, we were able to rule out a carcinoma as the cause of the current pain episodes in this patient based on clinical findings and course. We attributed the stomach cramps to compression of the common bile duct by the fibrotic head of pancreas. Pain and cholestasis regressed, thus obviating the need for surgical intervention (pancreaticojejunostomy). On therapy with enzyme substitution and insulin, the patient's exo- and endocrine pancreatic insufficiency was asymptomatic.
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PMID:[Chronic abdominal pain in a young diabetic patient]. 1111 10

We report the first case of an adrenocortical tumor that was successfully ablated using computerized tomography (CT)-guided percutaneous acetic acid injection. A 57-year-old woman presented with recurrent sudden onset of general weakness, polyuria, hypokalemia and low plasma renin activity with a high aldosterone level. The computerized tomogram and sonogram of the abdomen demonstrated a well-defined low-density tumor in the right adrenal gland. Under CT guidance, we successfully ablated the tumor using percutaneous acetic acid injection. This procedure took only 40 minutes and required only local anesthesia. The patient was up and walking the following day. During the next 2 years of clinical follow-up, there was no evidence of tumor recurrence.
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PMID:Computerized-tomography-guided percutaneous tumor ablation using acetic acid injection in an aldosterone-producing tumor--a novel therapy. 1115 61

We present a case of a germinoma in the sellar region of a 10-year-old female patient who presented with a history of polydipsia, polyuria and visual disturbances. The tumor was resected and histologically analyzed. Interphase cytogenetics was performed using chromosome specific (peri)-centromeric DNA probes for all the somatic and X chromosomes on fresh frozen tissues. Fluorescent in situ cell hybridization demonstrated accumulated cytogenetic abnormalities involving significant alterations of chromosome 1, 4, 5/19 and 15. The child was treated postoperatively by radiation and now appears well with only minor neurological deficits. At 3-year follow-up no recurrent tumor mass could be demonstrated.
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PMID:Cytogenetic profile of primary pituitary germinoma. 1126 5

A case of 35-year-old woman with parathyroid cancer is presented. Five years ago she underwent surgery for follicular thyroid cancer. Parathyroid cancer was evidenced by palpable, solid, irregularly shaped cervical tumor 5 cm in diameter. The patient had severe hyperparathyroidism confirmed by biochemical findings of hypercalcemia reaching 16 mg%, hypophosphatemia and hyperphosphatasemia. Serum parathormone level was 23-fold higher than the norm. These findings were accompanied by polyuria, polidypsia, symptoms of bone damage and renal calcification. After the surgery the patient's condition improved significantly despite persistent hyperparathyroidism. The level of parathormone decreased, but was still 11 times higher than the norm. Two months after the surgery she noticed a single node on her neck. The patient was re-operated for recurrence of parathyroid cancer. Serum parathormone level was then 6-8 times above the norm. Medical treatment with furosemide, calcitonin and biphosphonate resulted in normalization of calcemia and phosphatemia. Further management will aim at localization of foci of hyperactive parathyroid tissue in order to enable radical reoperation. The case is reported because of rare occurrence of parathyroid carcinoma as well as because the carcinoma occurred in a patient who previously had follicular thyroid cancer. There are no reports of coexistence of these two neoplasms in available literature.
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PMID:Coexistence of parathyroid carcinoma and non-medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. 1138 24

A 13-yr-old ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta) was evaluated for depression, anorexia, polyuria, and polydipsia. The lemur was in poor body condition and was anemic, hypoalbuminemic, and hyponatremic. Cytologic examination of aspirates of the spleen, liver, and bone marrow and histopathologic examination of liver and bone marrow biopsies revealed a disseminated round cell tumor. After euthanasia, necropsy revealed hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and mesenteric lymphadenomegaly. Neoplastic cells were present within the spleen, liver, kidneys, multiple lymph nodes, bone marrow, lung, small intestine, pancreas, and testicle and were composed of large anaplastic round cells in a background of small well-differentiated lymphocytes. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that the small well-differentiated lymphocytes labeled for the anti-human T-cell marker, CD3, and the large anaplastic round cells labeled with the anti-human B-cell marker, CD79a. On the basis of the immunohistochemical staining results and morphologic appearance, a diagnosis of a T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma was made.
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PMID:T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma in a ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta). 1155 62

A new technique of urinary tracts visualization--magnetoresonance urography (MRU)--for a year (2000) was applied in examination of 25 patients aged 17 to 63 years with ureteral concrements (n = 11), ureteropelvic stenosis (n = 10), ureteral stenosis (n = 2), urinary bladder tumor (n = 1), Ormond's disease (n = 1). MRU provides the same information about the obstruction and dilatation of the urinary tracts as excretory urography (EU). In cases of EU contraindication (allergy, renal failure) or lack of contrast substance excretion, MRU allows to avoid additional invasive diagnostic procedures. It also enables visualization of non-dilated urinary tracts in medicinal polyuria. Non-invasiveness, no need to contrast, absence of radiation load open wide perspectives for MRU application in various groups of patients including pregnant women.
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PMID:[Magnetic resonance urography: possibilities and prospects]. 1156 41

A 55-year-old woman was referred to our institution for evaluation of elevated plasma creatine phosphokinase, hypokalemia and hypertension. Her chief complaints were muscle weakness and polyuria. A left adrenal mass, 4 cm in diameter, was noted on computed tomography. Hormonal assessment demonstrated markedly elevated plasma aldosterone concentration, markedly low plasma renin activity, an abnormal diurnal variation in serum cortisol levels, suppressed baseline plasma adrenocorticotrophic hormone, and non-suppression of serum cortisol by dexamethasone suppression test. She showed no symptoms or signs suggestive of Cushing's syndrome. Adrenal scintigraphy with 131I-6-beta-iodomethyl-norcholesterol showed uptake on the left adrenal and inhibition of the contralateral adrenal gland. She was diagnosed with combined primary aldosteronism and preclinical Cushing's syndrome. Cases of combined primary aldosteronism and preclinical Cushing's syndrome are extremely rare. In patients with large aldosterone-producing adenoma, contralateral adrenal insufficiency should be anticipated after the removal of the tumor.
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PMID:Combined primary aldosteronism and preclinical Cushing's syndrome: an unusual case presentation of adrenal adenoma. 1176 34

In 1980, a 10-year-old boy was admitted to the authors' hospital with consciousness disturbance and vomiting. Computerized tomography (CT) scans revealed a pineal mass lesion and hydrocephalus. The tumor was totally removed and a ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt was inserted. Histological investigation of a surgical specimen revealed that it was a teratoma. Five years later, the patient was readmitted to the same institution with polyuria. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging revealed a mass lesion in the suprasellar region. The patient received systemic chemotherapy, and the tumor disappeared; however, 2 years after the chemotherapy, MR imaging demonstrated a right lateral ventricular mass. The tumor was totally resected, and histopathological investigation revealed a teratocarcinoma. Three years after the chemotherapy, CT scanning revealed suprasellar and right lateral ventricular tumor recurrences, for which the patient received irradiation and chemotherapy. The tumors disappeared and the patient achieved complete remission that lasted longer than 10 years. On January 25, 2000, however, he noticed hip pain. Lumbar MR imaging demonstrated a spinal tumor below L-4 and also an abdominal tumor. The abdominal tumor was totally removed, and the histological findings identified it as a germinoma. The patient received systemic chemotherapy and the tumor disappeared completely. The authors believe that the suprasellar tumor was a metachronous germinoma and that it had metastasized through the intrathecal route and the VP shunt.
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PMID:Intrathecal and intraperitoneal germinomas occurring 20 years after total removal of a pineal teratoma. Case report. 1183 13


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