Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Scrofula has been called "The Dangerous Masquerader" because of its propensity to mimic other diseases. Scrofula has been mistaken for metastatic carcinoma, regional neoplasms, thyroglossal duct cysts, fungal disease, toxoplasmosis, lymphoma, osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, bacterial adenitis, and collagen vascular disease. Because of the enormous number of infectious and neoplastic diseases acquired by the HIV positive population, the diagnosis of scrofula may be further delayed in some patients. In these patients the early diagnosis of scrofula might allow the early identification of HIV infection and the early institution of anti-retroviral therapy. The recommended duration of anti-tuberculosis therapy is also different in HIV positive patients. Therefore, to ensure the patient of the most beneficial therapy, the physician must always consider scrofula in the differential diagnosis of a neck mass, and particularly because of the increases incidence of intrapulmonary tuberculosis in AIDS patients, he must consider the possibility of HIV infection.
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PMID:The re-emergence of scrofula with HIV infection: a review of epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment. 181 95

Ionizing radiations have been shown to be carcinogenic to man as well as experimental animals. Malignancies following therapeutic radiation occur rarely. Over the past 10 years the authors recorded 10 cases of tumours in irradiated tissues. 3 occurred in patients irradiated for nasopharyngeal carcinoma, 3 were irradiated for tuberculosis adenitis, 2 for carcinoma of the cervix, 1 for carcinoma of the breast and 1 for basal cell carcinoma. The latent period for tumour induction following the irradiation varied from 5 years to 31 years. All these cases showed no evidence of recurrence or metastases of the original primary lesion; and the histology of the second primary differed from the first. Evidence of radiation damage was seen in all cases except for 2 patients who were treated for tuberculosis adenitis. The doses received varied from 900r to about, 9000r. Among the tumours produced, there were 3 cases of squamous cell carcinoma of the oral & postcricoid region, 2 cases of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid, 2 cases of adenocarcinoma of the rectum, 1 case of adenocarcinoma of the ethmoid, 1 case of osteosarcoma of the mandible and 1 case of extraskeletal osteosarcoma. The clinical features of these cases are discussed and other cases reported in the literature are reviewed.
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PMID:Radiation induced cancer: a report of 10 cases. 627 26