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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

CASE DESCRIPTION 4 dogs were examined because of pleural effusion and ventricular tachycardia, coughing and supraventricular tachycardia, appendicular osteosarcoma, and syncopal episodes. CLINICAL FINDINGS In all 4 dogs, a heart base tumor was identified by means of thoracic CT. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME In all 4 dogs, the heart base tumors were treated by means of stereotactic body radiation therapy. Dogs were anesthetized, and neuromuscular blockade was achieved with atracurium or vecuronium. A circle rebreathing system with 15 m (50 feet) of anesthetic tubing coursing through the vault wall was used to connect the patient to the anesthesia machine, which was located in the control room. After a brief period of hyperventilation, an inspiratory breath was held at 20 cm H2O for the duration of beam delivery. Each beam delivery lasted between 30 and 100 seconds. Immediately following the breath hold, assisted ventilation was resumed. Mean treatment delivery time for each patient was 26 minutes; mean total anesthesia time was 89 minutes. All patients recovered without complications. There was no evidence of hemoglobin desaturation or hypercapnia during the anesthetic procedure. CLINICAL RELEVANCE The technique allowed for control of the respiration cycle from outside the radiation vault and a short overall treatment time. No adverse effects were encountered. This procedure should be considered when delivering radiation to structures within the thoracic cavity.
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PMID:Neuromuscular blockade and inspiratory breath hold during stereotactic body radiation therapy for treatment of heart base tumors in four dogs. 2805 56

Endobronchial metastasis (EBM) from extrapulmonary primary malignancy is a rare entity. Although the most common site of metastasis of osteosarcoma is the lungs, EBM remains a rare occurrence. Cough and dyspnea are the most common symptoms. A significant number of patients are asymptomatic, making the diagnosis without any radiographic imaging challenging. CT scan of the lung, along with bronchoscopy and biopsy, is the mainstay of diagnosis and staging. A 36-year-old man presented with small cell osteosarcoma of the left maxillary region and was treated with surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. The patient presented 8 years later with axillary metastasis and was found to have lung metastasis on further workup. Bronchoscopy and biopsy proved an EBM that was debulked by hot snare technique. The patient was then started on chemotherapy for recurrent small cell osteosarcoma.
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PMID:Endobronchial metastasis as an uncommon pattern of metastatic dissemination from small cell osteosarcoma. 3136 15

Pleural effusions can be the first manifestation, recurrence, or metastasis of small round cell sarcomas in children. The most common are Ewing sarcoma, neuroblastoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma. The cytomorphology is variable, the cells can be cohesive, single cells, small or large, morphologically mimicking lymphomas, carcinomas, melanomas, and mesothelioma depending on the sarcoma involved. Osteosarcomas are rare. Their rarity, variable histomorphologic features, immunophenotypic heterogeneity, being of osseous or extraosseous origin and focality of malignant osteoid matrix make their cytologic recognition a diagnostic challenge. They can be confused with small round cell sarcomas, may be misinterpreted as degenerative inflammatory cells, or masked by florid reactive mesothelial hyperplasia particularly in pleural effusions. However, attention to certain cytomorphologic features in smears and cellblock sections should raise suspicion. We report a case of a 9-year-old child who presented with cough, chest pain and breathing difficulty, left pleural effusion, a collapsed consolidated lower lung lobe, and a clinical impression of pneumonia. Pleural fluid cytology was initially reported as inflammatory effusion with florid reactive mesothelial hyperplasia. Tissue biopsy of the lung mass showed histomorphologic features consistent with osteosarcoma. A careful look at the cytology materials and cellblock sections showed helpful cytomorphologic features that were masked by florid reactive mesothelial cells and misinterpreted as degenerative inflammatory lymphocytes. An extracellular matrix was a helpful hint. Malignant pleural effusion secondary to osteosarcoma is rare. Cytologic examination may help reach the correct diagnosis if the smears and cellblock sections are carefully evaluated for certain helpful cytomorphologic features, particularly osteoid matrix.
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PMID:Osteosarcoma pleural effusion: A diagnostic challenge with some cytologic hints. 3274 68


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