Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acute changes in mental status (AMS) develop in children with cancer from a multitude of cancer- and treatment-related complications. To determine the incidence, etiology, and outcome of children with cancer who had AMS, the medical records of all children under 18 years of age with systemic cancer (excluding primary central nervous system tumors) who had AMS in our institution during the years 1981 through 1987 were reviewed. AMS developed in 89 of 815 children at risk (11%). The AMS was caused by seizures in 53 (60%), an encephalopathy in 24 (27%), and a stroke syndrome in 12 (13%). AMS occurred in 42 of 305 (14%) with leukemia, 16 of 139 (12%) with lymphoma, 14 of 136 (10%) with sarcoma, 10 of 104 (9%) with neuroblastoma, and 7 of 104 (5%) with other malignancies. Children with acute lymphocytic leukemia were more prone to having seizures (61%), while children with nonacute lymphocytic leukemia were almost equally likely to have encephalopathies, strokes, or seizures. Children with lymphoma were admitted for treatment most often with an encephalopathy (44%). Etiologies for AMS were evaluated vigorously, and one or more etiologies were identified in 80 of 89 (89%) patients. Dependent on the type of tumor, the anticancer treatment used and, timing during the course of illness AMS occurred, specific diagnoses were more likely. Neurologic morbidity and mortality were dependent on the cause of AMS. Children with seizures that were initially difficult to control were more likely to require long-term anticonvulsant therapy.
...
PMID:Acute mental status changes in children with systemic cancer. 230 89

Acute cerebellar encephalopathy (ACE)--ataxia often associated with opsoclonus, polymyoclonus, and irritability--may be associated with neuroblastoma and should be suspected in a child who presents with ACE. The survival in ten children with ACE associated with neuroblastoma was 100%. Most of the tumors were ganglioneuroblastomas. The abdomen was the most common location for the tumor in this study although it also can be found in the mediastinum. All patients with this syndrome had a localized tumor. With ACTH therapy, ACE may resolve early postoperatively, but it tends to recur in most patients, continuing for as long as 3 years after the initial operation. Treatment with ACTH or prednisone modifies and rapidly clears the symptoms during the acute episode of recurrent ACE as well as helps to resolve subsequent neurologic sequelae. Significant neurologic sequelae persisted in seven of ten patients and included deficits in cognition or intellect, hyperactivity, impulsivity, emotional lability, and mild motor deficits. Seizures were seen in one patient.
...
PMID:Clinical outcome in children with acute cerebellar encephalopathy and neuroblastoma. 272 81

The association of neural crest tumors with myoclonic encephalopathy of infants has been well described. Since these tumors often are clinically occult the diagnostic modalities used to identify these lesions need to be sensitive. We describe a child with neuroblastoma associated with infantile myoclonic encephalopathy in whom magnetic resonance imaging identified the lesion while other techniques were unable to demonstrate a mass clearly. Magnetic resonance imaging should be considered as a diagnostic modality when adrenal lesions are suspected but not apparent with other imaging techniques.
...
PMID:The association of neuroblastoma with myoclonic encephalopathy of infants: the use of magnetic resonance as an imaging modality. 333 10

The liver in an infant or child is as liable to the same pathologies afflicting the adult liver but with certain differences in prevalence and causes. Genetic disorders are more likely to present in the paediatric age group where many involve metabolic processes such as galactosemia, phenylketonuria, glycogen storage disease and others. Many of these present in the newborn period. However, neoplasms and hamartomas also present in the newborn period, such as congenital neuroblastoma with an enormously enlarged liver, hepatoblastoma and haemangioma. The latter may present with intractable cardiac failure as a result of considerable shunting of blood. Acquired liver lesions often present in the newborn period or early infancy and this includes hepatitis and biliary atresia. The difficulties in the differentiation of the two lesions will be discussed together with the management of biliary atresia. As the child grows older, Reyes encephalopathy with microvesicular fat in the liver is not uncommon. The pathophysiology of Reyes encephalopathy as seen locally will be described. The choledochal cyst with direct (Caroli's disease) or indirect effect on the liver will be described. Problems of childhood portal hypertension as well as congenital hepatic fibrosis will be described. Hemosiderosis of the liver is chiefly seen in homozygous beta-thalassaemia patients who have been kept alive with repeated blood transfusions. Amoebic and pyogenic hepatitis, fatty liver due to protein malnutrition, biliary ascariasis, etc, which are common in tropical and subtropical countries are rarely seen now in Singapore children.
...
PMID:Paediatric liver disorders in Singapore. 346 38

Cerebellar ataxia and opsoclonus were the initial manifestations of an associated neuroblastoma in a 20-month-old girl. Two months after the initial symptomatology, a physical examination revealed an abnormal mass palpable left to the midline. Urinary catecholamines were within normal limits. The child's neurological findings improved immediately after surgery, and steroid treatment and the follow-up on her after 2 years revealed normal general and neurological development. The syndrome of myoclonic encephalopathy including cerebellar ataxia, myoclonus and opsoclonus, and its relationship to neuroblastoma is reviewed. Failure to recognize this association can result in delays in both diagnosis and treatment and could be fatal.
...
PMID:Cerebellar ataxia and opsoclonus as the initial manifestations of myoclonic encephalopathy associated with neuroblastoma. 369 May 66

Neurovirulence of the Onderstepoort strain of canine distemper virus (CDV) adapted to human neural cell lines was determined by the intracerebral inoculation of DDD mice at 3 and 5 weeks of age. Intensity of neurovirulence was estimated by histopathological changes in the central nervous system and clinical symptoms. The original virus propagated in Vero cells induced leptomeningoencephalitis, whereas neuroblastoma-adapted virus induced nerve cell degeneration and mild encephalitis with relatively low morbidity and fatality. In contrast, the viruses adapted to glioblastoma and oligodendroglioma caused high morbidity and fatality. The latter two viruses induced necrotizing encephalopathy including edema and hyperemia. In addition, the glioblastoma-adapted virus induced formation of giant cells. The oligodendroglioma-adapted virus caused demyelination and spongy state associated with degeneration of glial cells and axons. These observations are discussed in regard to a possible correlation between the neurovirulence of CDV in mice and its tropism for neural cells in vitro.
...
PMID:Neurovirulence in mice of neural cell-adapted canine distemper virus. 372 59

The authors report a new case of infantile myoclonic encephalopathy with opsoclonus and neuroblastoma in a 14 months-old infant. Some immunologic abnormalities were found at the initial course of the disease. The review of 110 cases of "dancing-eyes syndrome" permit them to specify clinical features and prognosis but cannot explain the pathogenesis of this rare disease.
...
PMID:[Opsomyoclonus syndrome in children. A new case. Review of the literature (110 cases)]. 383 36

The syndrome of opsoclonus-myoclonus (OM) is an infrequent but well-known "remote effect" of neuroblastoma in children. The OM syndrome is even less frequent in adults. A few cases of adult paraneoplastic OM have been described in association with several systemic neoplasms. We report the unique case of a 29-year-old man with metastatic medullary thyroid carcinoma in whom OM developed as part of a generalized transient encephalopathy. We outline the postulated anatomic lesions and pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying the OM syndrome, as well as examine the possible connections between the neuroendocrine derivation of medullary thyroid carcinoma and the neurotoxic and/or autoimmune theories of the causation of the OM syndrome in patients with systemic neoplasms.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus. Association with medullary thyroid carcinoma and review of the literature. 395 25

Neuroblastoma may be extremely difficult to recognize, particularly when the tumor presents as a primary central nervous system disease. Central nervous system involvement may be considered as primary intracerebral neuroblastoma, metastases to the cranium from an occult primary, primary intraorbital neuroblastoma originating in the ciliary ganglion, metastatic intraorbital neuroblastoma from an occult primary, primary intraspinal neuroblastoma originating in dorsal root ganglia, intraspinal metastatic disease, and distant effects such as myoclonic encephalopathy. Primary neuroblastoma within the ciliary ganglion and primary intraspinal neuroblastoma are extremely rare entities. Illustrative cases the demonstrate the broad spectrum of neurologic presentations are offered. The second known report of neuroblastoma in association with primary pulmonary hypoventilation (Ondine curse) is included.
...
PMID:Neuroblastoma presenting as central nervous system disease. 681 38

Two cases of infantile myoclonic encephalopathy with opsoclonus and neuroblastoma are reported. One of them was observed in a 16-month-old boy and the remaining one in a 13-month-old girl. In both cases the tumour was a stade III abdominal neuroblastoma. Urinary catecolamine excretion was increased in the girl and that of VMA in both patients. Treatment of the tumour with surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy resulted in a immediate disappearance of the neurologic picture in the girl. The same measures were equally successful in the boy implemented with a course of ACTH. Both children are free of tumour three years later, and they do not bear any psychomotor sequelae. The main features of this rare association are briefly commented.
...
PMID:[Infantile myoclonic encephalopathy with opsoclonus and neuroblastoma. Apropos of 2 cases]. 688 34


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>