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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of tumours arising in otherwise normal bones, fibrosarcoma is about one-third as common as
osteosarcoma
and may have a very slightly better prognosis. A comparison of the aetiology and behaviour of forty-nine fibrosarcomata and 152 osteosarcomata indicates several similar features.
Fibrosarcoma
lacks the characteristic peak incidence in adolescence of
osteosarcoma
, but the age and sex distributions of both tumour types in patients of middle life--twenty-five to sixty-five years--are remarkably similar, even in their frequency. With fibrosarcoma, perhaps, lung metastases are fewer and appear later, thus contributing to the slightly better survival, but there is some increase in the proportion of extra-pulmonary secondaries. As with
osteosarcoma
, patients with fibrosarcoma show some increase in the length of post-metastatic survival when metastases are of later appearance. For the whole series the five-year crude survival rate was 21 per cent, better results being recorded for patients with histologically well differentiated tumours (30 per cent) and for long bone tumours when the patient was metastasis-free initially and the tumour was treated by prompt ablation (40 per cent). These are probably the best results one may expect for osseous fibrosarcoma without recourse to adjuvant antimetastatic therapy. Complete control of the primary tumour is likewise mandatory, and can be assured only by complete surgical removal when this is technically feasible.
...
PMID:Metastatic spread of fibrosarcoma of bone; A report on forty-nine cases, and a comparison with osteosarcoma. 107 Oct 90
Five patients with nonlymphomatous sarcoma metastatic to the brain are presented and the literature reviewed. In 50 patients, brain metastasis was verified pathologically and some case data were available, including the five reported here. In five patients, there was pathologic verification but no case data. Thirty-nine other patients were found without such verification. Reportedly, most types of sarcomas are able to metastasize to the brain, and are represented in these 94 patients.
Fibrosarcoma
and alveolar soft-part sarcoma tumors metastasize to the brain without regard to treatment technique. There may be a group of tumors, including malignant fibrous histiocytoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and perhaps leiomyosarcoma and
osteosarcoma
, in which the incidence of brain metastases has increased with improved sarcoma chemotherapy (CT). In this group particularly, but also in alveolar soft-part sarcoma and others, the presence of lung metastases may increase the probability of brain metastasis occurring subsequently.
...
PMID:Sarcoma metastatic to the brain. 327 83
Twenty-six patients who had a malignant giant-cell tumor of bone--a sarcoma either juxtaposed to a zone of typical benign giant-cell tumor or occurring at the site of a previously documented benign giant-cell tumor--have been seen at the Mayo Clinic. Of the twenty-six tumors, nineteen were secondary to a previous attempt at local control of a benign giant-cell tumor. All but one of these nineteen patients with a secondary tumor had received therapeutic irradiation four to thirty-nine years earlier. The nature and duration of the symptoms and the sites of predilection of the malignant giant-cell tumors were the same as for benign giant-cell tumor.
Fibrosarcoma
occurred three times as frequently as
osteosarcoma
. The best results of treatment of the secondary sarcoma were obtained with early ablation.
...
PMID:Secondary malignant giant-cell tumor of bone. Clinicopathological assessment of nineteen patients. 374 47
Surgery of soft tissue sarcomas in children has been modified by the introduction of multidisciplinary treatment so that major amputation and exenterations are now rare in the management of these tumors in children. Surgery must still be well planned for total removal of the tumor with preservation of limbs and, in most instances, the function of pelvic organs. The commonest soft tissue sarcomas in children are embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), fibrosarcoma, and synovial sarcoma. Treatment of embryonal RMS can now achieve a 2-year survival of 80% at all sites. Surgery and irradiation are used to control the primary tumor and multidrug chemotherapy to control metastases or prevent dissemination of localized tumor.
Fibrosarcoma
in children, usually a low-grade, extra-abdominal desmoid lesion, does not respond to radiation treatment or chemotherapy, and management is by surgery alone. It shows a marked tendency to local recurrence, and multiple local resections may be necessary for cure. Ninety percent of the children with this tumor can be salvaged by surgery and careful follow-up. The management of synovial sarcoma is surgical and similar to that of RMS. Although not radiosensitive as is RMS, this tumor has responded well to multidisciplinary treatment. Adequate resection is now followed by a chemotherapy protocol similar to that used in
osteogenic sarcoma
. The smaller numbers of these tumors and their varied natural history make evaluation of treatment difficult. Other soft tissue sarcomas seen with extreme rarity in children are liposarcoma, angiosarcoma, and neurosarcoma. These tumors are treated with the same protocol as that of RMS.
...
PMID:Surgery of soft tissue sarcomas in children. 627 15
Patients with malignant bone tumours often come at a very late stage of disease to Medical Colleges. Because of their high mortality rate, accurate & quick diagnosis of these lesions become essential, inspite of clinical, radiological and histopathological assessments. A simple, inexpensive, safe & least traumatic technique-fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in diagnosis of 55 malignant bone tumours was carried out. Specific tumour types metastatic tumour (12), Giant cell tumour (12), Ewing's sarcoma (10),
Osteosarcoma
(7), Multiple myeloma (7), Chordoma (3), Chondrosarcoma (3) and
Fibrosarcoma
(1) could be ascertained in 87.2% whereas malignant tumour was suggested in 94.5% (52 cases).
...
PMID:Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in malignant bone tumours. 781 54
Primary cardiac malignancies are rare tumors that are difficult to diagnose clinically. Different primary cardiac malignancies may have different clinical, morphologic, and radiologic features and intracardiac locations. Angiosarcoma is the most common primary cardiac malignancy. It tends to occur in the right atrium and involve the pericardium. Because of its tendency to hemorrhage, angiosarcoma often demonstrates areas of increased signal intensity with T1-weighted sequences. Undifferentiated sarcomas typically occur in the left atrium and have variable epidemiologic and radiologic features. Rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common primary cardiac malignancy in children and is more likely than other primary cardiac sarcomas to involve the valves. Primary cardiac
osteogenic sarcoma
almost always occurs in the left atrium and frequently demonstrates calcification. Certain features (eg, broad base of attachment, origin at a site other than the atrial septum) help differentiate this tumor from left atrial myxoma. Leiomyosarcoma favors the left atrium and tends to invade the pulmonary veins and mitral valve.
Fibrosarcoma
also tends to occur in the left atrium and is often necrotic. Liposarcoma is very rare and usually manifests as a large, infiltrating mass. Foci of macroscopic fat are occasionally seen. Primary cardiac lymphoma occurs more commonly in immunocompromised patients, frequently involves the pericardium, and, unlike other primary cardiac malignancies, may respond to chemotherapy. The advent of cross-sectional imaging has allowed earlier detection of primary cardiac malignancies as well as more accurate diagnosis and characterization.
...
PMID:CT and MR imaging of primary cardiac malignancies. 1055 66