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)

Nonchromaffin paraganglioma (NCP), also called glomus body tumor or chemodectoma, is rarely found in the orbit. The behavior of orbital nonchromaffin paraganglioma may potentially be more aggressive than in other head and neck locations. Diagnosis depends on electron microscopic demonstration of membrane-bound neurosecretory granules. Results of histopathologic study show a well-circumscribed lesion without a true capsule with alveolar or organoid arrangements of epithelioid cells within a reticulin framework with thin-walled blood vessels. Cells are polygonal with round or oval nuclei containing rare mitotic figures and pale-staining cytoplasm. Differential diagnosis includes alveolar soft-part sarcoma, alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, neuroblastoma, carcinoid, and granular cell tumor. Of 29 previously reported cases of orbital NCP, 16 have been reclassified as alveolar soft-part sarcoma. The authors report a patient with an electron microscopically established orbital NCP, with the history of a contralateral glomus jugulare tumor irradiated 14 years previously.
...
PMID:Orbital nonchromaffin paraganglioma. A case report and review of the literature. 255 86

Congenital alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma in a newborn was reported. She had multiple subcutaneous tumors and looked like a blueberry muffin baby. From the clinical signs and the histological pictures, a diagnosis of neuroblastoma was considered. Laboratory data showed no abnormalities. Electron microscopic examination revealed myofilament and incipient stria formation. On the basis of these data, a final diagnosis of congenital alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma associated with multiple skin metastases was made.
...
PMID:Congenital alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma presenting as a blueberry muffin baby. 260 Feb 81

531 cases of malignant neoplasms and potentially malignant hyperplasia in children and adolescents diagnosed in the Department of Pathomorphology, Institute of Mother and Child between 1978/79 and 1983 are presented. Only patients treated in this hospital were included into the study. The most common diagnoses were neuroblastoma (68 cases), rhabdomyosarcoma (62 cases), nephroblastoma (56 cases), osteogenic sarcoma (47 cases), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (41 cases). Besides neoplasms most typical for childhood and adolescence the rare less typical cases were also seen.
...
PMID:[Malignant neoplasms and potentially malignant hyperplasia in children and adolescents from material at the Department of Pathomorphology, Institute of Mother and Child during 1978/79-1983]. 263 66

The majority of lesions in the neck of children will prove to be benign and of congenital origin arising from such structures as the thyroglossal duct and the branchial clefts in addition to hemangiomas and lymphangiomas. However, it is essential that lymphadenopathy be proven infectious and any asymptomatic lymph node enlargement must be considered Hodgkin's disease until proven otherwise. The occasional neuroblastoma or rhabdomyosarcoma presenting in the neck can usually be identified as solid by sonography, leading to early investigation and biopsy. Because of the abundance of important structures that course through the neck, surgery should be conducted in an operating suite with sophisticated, modern anesthetic techniques and with a surgeon experienced in dealing with the full array of lesions that occur.
...
PMID:Common lumps and bumps of the head and neck in infants and children. 266 78

The incidence of primary and metastatic cutaneous malignant solid tumors was investigated in a pediatric dermatology department. Among 25,000 first time patients seen between 1971 and 1985, 19 had cutaneous malignant solid tumors with an annual incidence of 0.7 for every 1,000 pediatric dermatology patients. Nine cases had primary cutaneous tumors and 10 cases metastatic tumors. The majority of patients were infants (zero to two years). The tumors found were rhabdomyosarcoma, six cases; basal-cell carcinoma, four cases; neuroblastoma, three cases; malignant melanoma, two cases, squamous-cell carcinoma, dermatofibrosarcoma, atypical fibroxanthoma and myxopapillary ependymoma, one case of each. Predisposing factors for the developing of malignancy were present in 42% of patients.
...
PMID:[Incidence of malignant, primary and metastatic solid skin tumors at a pediatric dermatology service]. 266 91

In view of the personal observation that malignant peripheral neuroectodermal tumours (MPNT) can present different histological growth patterns, 41 cases of MPNT were histologically and immunohistochemically studied. The median age of the 41 patients was 15 years (range: 9 months - 23 years). There were 27 males and 14 females. Most tumours (23/41) were located in the thoracopulmonary region. In 31/41 cases there was bone as well as soft tissue involvement. The following histopathological patterns were found: Ewing's sarcoma-like (n = 7), atypical Ewing's sarcoma-like (n = 4), neuroblastoma-like (n = 8), rhabdomyosarcoma-like (n = 8), and hemangiopericytoma-like (n = 1). In 2 cases combined patterns were noted, one tumour being characterized by neuroblastoma-like and Burkitt's lymphoma-like features. Most cases of MPNT differed from the cytological features of typical Ewing's sarcoma in that they contained hyperchromatic nuclei with distinct nucleoli. Some reticulin fibrils were found in between the cells of some cases. Immunohistochemically, 19/23 cases reacted positively to vimentin, 29/32 to neuron specific enolase (NSE), 16/28 to protein S-100, and 1/9 to glial fibrillary acidic protein. 12/24 cases reacted positively to NSE and protein S-100. Neurofilaments and desmin were not found in the formalin fixed material of the present study. The results show that most cases of MPNT can be distinguished from typical Ewing's sarcoma by cytological and histological findings. Differential diagnosis from atypical Ewing's sarcoma, neuroblastoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma is possible by immunohistochemistry.
...
PMID:[Malignant peripheral neuroectodermal tumors. Histological and immunohistological conditions in 41 cases]. 267 76

Sinonasal neoplasms and neoplasm-like proliferations composed of light microscopically poorly differentiated or undifferentiated, small- to medium-sized cells cause considerable diagnostic confusion. Lesions in this category include lymphoepithelioma (undifferentiated carcinoma), olfactory neuroblastoma, small-cell undifferentiated (oat cell) carcinoma, sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma, malignant melanoma, pituitary adenoma, lymphoid hyperplasia, malignant lymphoma, plasmacytoma, lymphomatoid granulomatosis, rhabdomyosarcoma, mesenchymal chondrosarcoma, small cell osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, and synovial sarcoma. Many of these lesions can be definitively diagnosed based on light microscopic features alone, but, in some instances, additional techniques such as immunohistochemistry are of value. The authors review the pertinent clinicopathologic features of the above lesions, with emphasis on light microscopic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features of particular utility in differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:"Undifferentiated" neoplasms of the sinonasal region: differential diagnosis based on clinical, light microscopic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features. 269 5

Natural killer (NK) cells and NK cell activity were determined in three groups (newly diagnosed [n = 21], on therapy [n = 21], and off therapy [n = 18]) of children with various types of malignant solid tumors and in a control group (n = 26) by means of Leu-7 and Leu-11b monoclonal antibodies and a 4-hour 51Cr-release assay, respectively. The erythroleukemia cell line K562 was used as a target cell. The newly diagnosed group included eight patients with localized disease (Stage I-II), ten with bulky but nonmetastatic disease (Stage III), and three with metastases (Stage IV). The mean percent of NK cell activity in the newly diagnosed group was significantly higher than that of the control group. Children with Stage III tumors at diagnosis had higher mean NK cell function than those with Stage I-II and Stage IV. On therapy patients had significantly fewer NK cells and lower NK cell cytotoxicity than those in the other groups studied. We also studied the following: (1) the in vitro effect of recombinant interferon-alpha (rIFN-alpha) and recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) on NK cell function of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from children with solid malignancies; and (2) the susceptibility of neuroblastoma-derived (CHP-126 and SKNSH) and rhabdomyosarcoma-derived (A-204) cell lines to NK cell lysis. Both rIFN-alpha and rIL-2 enhanced NK cell activity of PBL from children with malignancies and healthy children against K562 and solid tumor cell lines. The enhancing effect or rIL-2 was greater than that of rIFN-alpha. CHP-126 and SKNSH cell lines were susceptible to NK cell lysis mediated by the PBL of children with neuroblastoma and the control group. The A-204 cell line was less sensitive than K562 to NK cell cytotoxicity. Our results suggest a potential therapeutic role for both cytokines in the treatment of malignant solid tumors of childhood.
...
PMID:Natural killer cells in children with malignant solid tumors. Effect of recombinant interferon-alpha and interleukin-2 on natural killer cell function against tumor cell lines. 278 77

Twenty-nine children (median age: 41 months) with advanced solid tumors received, as consolidation therapy, two consecutive courses of high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) followed by mafosfamide-purged autologous marrow transplantation (ABMT) with a 3- to 4-month interval between each course. The malignancies were neuroblastoma (n = 22), Ewing's sarcoma (n = 5) and rhabdomyosarcoma (n = 2). Patients received a preparatory regimen consisting of combined high-dose melphalan before each ABMT, with the exception of five patients who received busulfan and cyclophosphamide before the second ABMT. Prior to HDC, bone marrow sufficient for two transplantations was harvested in remission, treated with mafosfamide (50 micrograms/ml) and cryopreserved. Following incubation with the drug, a consistent inhibition (greater than 99%) of granulocyte and macrophage colony-forming units was observed. Despite the elimination of measurable hematopoietic progenitors, all patients underwent engraftment within a similar period of time after the first and the second ABMT. However, peripheral leukocyte and granulocyte recovery was delayed (median 26 and 28 days, respectively, after the first graft; median 27 and 28 days after the second graft). No difference was observed in the bacterial infections following the first and second ABMT. One patient died after the second transplant with diffuse aspergillosis. Recovery to 50 x 10(9) platelets/l occurred after a median 42 days (range 19-71) after the first ABMT and 43 days (range 14-110) after the second. Two patients died of recurrent disease before attaining a normal platelet level. One patient remained thrombocytopenic and died from visceral failure at day 200. These results demonstrate the feasibility of repeated ABMT with mafosfamide-treated marrow.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hemopoietic reconstitution after repeated autologous transplantation with mafosfamide-purged marrow. 279 Mar 32

We reviewed the charts of 352 patients at the Mayo Clinic who were diagnosed and treated for primary soft-tissue sarcomas of the head and neck from 1962 to 1982. The age at diagnosis ranged from 6 weeks to 91 years; 28 percent were pediatric patients. Regional or distant metastases were present at the time of primary diagnosis in 8 percent of patients. Nonorbital rhabdomyosarcoma was the most common tumor type (17 percent), and neuroblastoma was the rarest (2 percent). In children, rhabdomyosarcomas were proportionally more common, as was overall involvement of the orbit. Surgical excision was the sole method of tumor control in 49 percent of patients; excision with adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy was used in 33 percent. In those with localized disease, overall survival was 81 percent at 2 years, 68 percent at 5 years, and 60 percent at 10 years postoperatively. Patients with angiosarcoma and nonorbital rhabdomyosarcoma experienced the poorest survival rates.
...
PMID:Soft-tissue sarcomas of the head and neck. 280 43


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>