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)

A 36-year-old female was admitted with leptomeningeal melanoma associated with straight sinus thrombosis manifesting as headache and vomiting. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging showed the subarachnoid space was diffusely enhanced. Her consciousness rapidly deteriorated to a coma. Angiography demonstrated straight sinus thrombosis. Thrombolysis by superselective catheterization and infusion of urokinase was successfully performed. She recovered consciousness, but developed paraparesis 2 weeks later. Malignant melanoma with meningeal dissemination was diagnosed by an open biopsy of the lumbar lesion. Angiitis induced by the infiltration of tumor cells and activation of the blood coagulation cascade was probably the causative mechanism of the sinus thrombosis.
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PMID:Leptomeningeal melanoma associated with straight sinus thrombosis--case report. 936 36

We report a case of a patient with isolated central nervous system relapse of classical seminoma, refractory to intrathecal and systemic chemotherapy, but successfully salvaged with craniospinal axis irradiation. A 44-year-old man with bulky Stage II classic seminoma obtained complete remission with four cycles of cisplatin etoposide combination chemotherapy, but relapsed with lumbar vertebral metastases with epidural spinal cord compression 5 months after completion of primary treatment. He underwent laminectomy, local radiotherapy, and salvage chemotherapy. Two months later he developed cranial nerve palsies, and magnetic resonance imaging confirmed leptomeningeal disease. After brain radiotherapy, systemic and intrathecal chemotherapies were begun but tumor recurred around the cauda equina, producing paraparesis. The patient received salvage craniospinal irradiation, with resolution of paraparesis and cranial nerve palsies. Thirty months after completion of craniospinal radiotherapy, he remains in complete remission. We suggest consideration of craniospinal axis irradiation as salvage therapy in patients with isolated central nervous system relapse of seminoma.
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PMID:Seminoma with isolated central nervous system relapse, and salvage with craniospinal irradiation. 960 51

An extradural spinal tumor was diagnosed in a 12-year-old Labrador retriever that was presented with a one-week history of paraparesis. Myelography indicated a deviation of the spinal cord to the right side at the level of the second lumbar (L2) vertebra. The difference in length measuring the left and right sides of the L2 vertebra suggested a fracture of the vertebral body. Severe bone remodeling and an extradural mass were seen on computed tomography (CT). Clinical, radiographical, and histological findings are described and considered homologous to extradural angiolipomas described in the human literature.
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PMID:Extradural spinal angiolipoma associated with bone lysis in a dog. 972 66

We report on an in vivo model of human myeloma producing bone disease in irradiated severe combined immunodeficiency disease mice using the human myeloma cell line JJN-3 and its subline JJN-3 T1. The cell lines are not Epstein-Barr virus transformed and produce large amounts of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF). Mice had radiological signs of osteolysis and mild hypercalcemia. Xenografted cells were predominantly found in bone marrow and brown adipose tissue, but also in meninges and liver. Take was documented by histopathological examination, immunophenotyping of cultured bone marrow, and radiography. HGF was detected in serum and bone marrow plasma. Disease generally occurred within 45 days of intravenous inoculation and was signaled by paraparesis or signs of intracranial neoplasia. More than 90% of the mice had take of xenografts. The subline JJN-3 T1 gave more reproducible bone marrow take than the native cell line. Bone histomorphometric examination revealed a 99% reduction in osteoblast counts and a 33% reduction in osteoclast counts in areas of tumor growth. Bone formation rates were reduced by 53%. The results suggest that osteoblastopenia and reduced bone formation is of importance for the occurrence of osteolytic lesions in this model.
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PMID:Marked osteoblastopenia and reduced bone formation in a model of multiple myeloma bone disease in severe combined immunodeficiency mice. 993 80

Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease is an autosomal dominant hereditary disorder showing various clinical features. We analyzed 6 patients with spinal cord hemangioblastoma associated with VHL disease in four families. All patients had cerebellar hemangioblastomas. Four cases carried retinal hemangioblastoma and 5 cases showed visceral lesions; renal cell carcinoma (2 cases), renal cyst (2 cases), pancreas cyst (2 cases) and paraovarian tumor. In four cases, spinal cord hemangioblastomas were multiple. Ten symptomatic or rapidly growing lesions in 5 patients were surgically resected. Two of these lesions were extramedullary spinal root hemangioblastoma. Operative results were good except for a case of ventrally placed thoracic spinal intramedullary hemangioblastoma who showed paraparesis postoperatively. One patient who suffered from complete paraplegia preoperatively did not recover after surgery. In two patients, renal cell carcinoma was detected and nephrectomy was undergone. It was noteworthy that metastasis of renal cell carcinoma to the hemangioblastoma was histologically proved with anti-cytokeratin immunostaining in two patients with VHL-associated renal cell carcinoma. Molecular genetic analysis showed a missence mutation in one family and possible intragenic deletion in another family. However, two families showed no VHL gene mutation with single strand conformational polymorphism or Southern blot analyses. Spinal cord hemangioblastomas in VHL disease are often multiple and located at various sites and seem to be underestimated. Surveillance should start in childhood and requires annual follow-up with imaging of the central nervous system and abdominal viscera. Presymptomatic diagnosis by gene analysis can be very useful for early detection of this disease.
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PMID:[Analysis of spinal cord hemangioblastoma in von Hippel-Lindau disease]. 1039 36

Benign osteoclastomas of the spine above the sacrum are uncommon lesions. Acute paraparesis as the presenting sign of disease is unusual and rarely described in the literature. We report on the case of a 41 yrs old male who underwent acute T3-5 laminectomy for spinal cord decompression from a T4 expansive mass lesion with locally destructive growth. Although a malignant lesion was suspected, definitive histologic examination disclosed a benign osteoclastoma. Therefore, elective trans-thoracic total vertebrectomy T4 with ventral stabilization was performed to allow for marginal total resection of the tumor and reconstruction of the spine. Twenty-four months after the procedure the patient has made a good neurologic recovery with no evidence of tumor recurrence.
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PMID:[Acute symptom transverse laminectomy for a benign osteoclastoma of thethoracic spine--case report and review of the literature]. 1039 68

Spinal extradural angiolipomas are distinct, benign, and rare lesions composed of mature lipocytes admixed with abnormal blood vessels. They account for 0.14% of all spinal axis tumors. The case described here was a 72-year-old patient presenting with a history of paraparesis, hypoesthesia under the T2 level, hyperreflexia, and urinary overflow incontinence that appeared within 7 days after the administration of a coronary vasodilator drug regimen. The spinal magnetic resonance scan showed a lipomatous mass with signal void lesions, suggesting a vascular component of the tumor. The patient improved rapidly after surgical resection of the epidural tumor and decompression of the cord. According to the present literature, the duration of neurological symptoms ranges from 1 to 180 months (mean 28 months). But this patient's neurological deterioration took place 4 days before hospitalization. We believe that this can be explained by the increased tumor blood volume caused by vasodilator drugs, which in turn exerted a pulsatile compressive effect on the cord.
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PMID:Spinal angiolipoma: case report and review of literature. 1045 Oct 53

We report an exceptional case of aspecific inflammatory lesion of the thoracic spinal cord simulating an intramedullary glial tumor. Patient history was characterized by progressive spastic paraparesis with urinary incontinence; MR imaging (T4-T5) showed an enhancing intrinsic mass lesion. Myelotomy enabled partial resection of grayish astrocytoma-like tissue. Only light microscope examination was possible and disclosed aspecific inflammatory tissue composed of eosinophils, lymphocytes and histiocytes. After the operation, the patient improved promptly and no further therapy was administered. Control MRI after four months, one year and two years showed complete disappearance of the intramedullary mass lesion and the patient remained clinically stable with no other signs of disease. Since electron microscopic as well as immunohistochemical studies were not available, a definitive histological diagnosis was not possible. However on the basis of some clinical similarities with cases of isolated histiocytosis X of the CNS reported in the literature, we suggest that a diagnosis of isolated intramedullary eosinophilic granuloma could be reasonable.
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PMID:Aspecific inflammatory lesion (histiocytosis?) simulating intramedullary astrocytoma. Case report. 1049 69

Splice variants of CD44 molecule-harboring exon 10 (v6), often called v6 variants (v6v), are shown to confer tumor progressive, metastatic or invasive capacities. Furthermore, CD44 molecule on activated T-cells are shown to be required for infiltration of these cells into the inflammatory site and for accelerated immune response. Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I)-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) is caused by HTLV-I infection and characterized by spastic paraparesis and urinary disturbance with perivascular HTLV-I-infected and activated CD4+ T-cell infiltration. In order to explore the underlying mechanism causing the disease after HTLV-I infection, we analyzed CD44 variant expression on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and in the spinal cord specimens from patients with HAM/TSP, and compared them with those from other HTLV-I-infected individuals and controls. We found that v6v expression with special direct link of exons 10 (v6) and 14(v10) was highly expressed in PBMC from patients with HAM/TSP and that v6v and CD4 double positive T-cell infiltration into the spinal cord lesion of HAM/TSP. This combination of CD44 splice variant has not been previously reported in the study of chronic inflammatory disorders and may be a marker molecule for T-cells infiltrating into the central nervous system (CNS), especially the spinal cord.
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PMID:CD44 splice variant involvement in the chronic inflammatory disease of the spinal cord: HAM/TSP. 1062 60

A 2-year-old Basset Hound was admitted to the University of Florida Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital with progressive spastic paraparesis. At necropsy, intradural extramedullary tumors produced areas of spinal cord swelling and softening in spinal cord segments T11-T12 and L4-L6. Histologic examination of the masses revealed sheets of polygonal blastemal cells, epithelial cells forming tubules and rosettes, and embryonal glomeruloid-like structures in the thoracic mass. Cells in the lumbar mass were less differentiated, forming rare tubules and no glomeruloid-like structures. The occurrence of two tumors in the spinal cord along with the less differentiated appearance of the lumbar tumor raises the possibility that the lumbar mass arose as a result of intraspinal metastasis. To our knowledge, this is the first report of multifocal or metastatic canine spinal nephroblastoma. In addition, the vimentin and cytokeratin immunohistochemical staining characteristics of these spinal cord nephroblastomas are described.
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PMID:Possible intraspinal metastasis of a canine spinal cord nephroblastoma. 1064 88


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