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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 62-year-old man was admitted because of
paresis
of the legs and a bleeding tendency. He was diagnosed as metastatic bone cancer with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). In spite of treatment, his general condition progressively deteriorated and he died of respiratory failure 13 days later. Autopsy revealed a carcinoma in adenoma in the rectum. Although the depth of cancer invasion was confined to the submucosal layer, disseminated
carcinomatosis
of the bone marrow and tumor emboli in blood vessels of the lung were present.
...
PMID:Disseminated carcinomatosis of bone marrow from submucosal carcinoma in adenoma of the rectum. 147 66
Three cases of bilateral deafness with cytologically-demonstrated meningeal
carcinomatosis
are reported. The first patient, a 64-year old man, presented with bilateral deafness, gait disturbances, and bilateral facial
paresis
. The second patient, a 78-year-old man, had bilateral deafness, unsteady gait and fluctuations in consciousness. The last patient, a 69-year-old man, complained of bilateral deafness and severe headache, and presented with right facial
paresis
and left laterodeviation while walking. All three patients had abnormal cochleo-vestibular findings and brainstem auditory evoked responses (BAER) that suggested peripheral lesions with absent or very delayed I waves. The brain CT scans with an without contrast enhancement were entirely normal, and the diagnosis was established by lumbar puncture. From our own cases and a review of the literature, deafness in meningeal
carcinomatosis
may start unilaterally but becomes bilateral in less than a week. Vestibular disturbances may not be apparent, but they can be demonstrated in almost all cases. Facial paresis or plegia is also a very frequent finding. The destruction of the eighth and seventh cranial nerves is probably due to direct infiltration by neoplastic cells as well as to ischemia through compression of the nerve supplying vessels. The 3 cases presented here emphasize once again the important fact that meningeal
carcinomatosis
remains a cytological diagnosis, several lumbar punctures being sometimes necessary, and that cerebrospinal fluid studies cannot yet be supplanted by other diagnostic techniques like contrast-enhanced CT or MRI with gadolinium.
...
PMID:[Bilateral deafness, an initial manifestation of meningeal carcinomatosis]. 160 23
We present an occult metastatic signet-ring cell gallbladder carcinoma in a 78-year-old woman, who complained of recurrent headaches, dysarthria, and
paresis
of the tongue. Cranial imaging showed contrast enhancement of the basal leptomeninges, and the cerebrospinal fluid displayed clusters of adenocarcinoma cells proposed as leptomeningeal
carcinomatosis
of the breast, lung or gut. However, postmortem examination revealed the gallbladder as the site of the primary carcinoma with focal signet-ring cell differentiation. In patients with progressive neurologic deterioration due to leptomeningeal
carcinomatosis
, adenocarcinomas from the gastrointestinal and hepatic systems should be considered. It is likely that signet-ring cell carcinomas display an increased affinity to leptomeningeal spread.
...
PMID:Leptomeningeal carcinomatosis and cranial nerve palsy as presenting symptoms of a clinically inapparent gallbladder carcinoma. 1044 66
Leptomeningeal
carcinomatosis
, also known as carcinomatous meningitis, is defined by spreading of neoplastic cells to the meninges and ventricles, and is a form of cancer dissemination. In this case, a patient with inflammatory bowel disease had developed a neoplastic process that spread to the meninges. A 49-year-old woman developed an abdominal pain, and was diagnosed the same month with Crohn's disease, complicated with intestinal perforation, for which she was hospitalized. Pathological examination revealed acute phase-terminal ileitis. She undergone many hospitalizations during which she was suspected to have celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and tuberculous meningitis, as well as femoral head necrosis after she had been unsuccessfully treated with Prednisone for Crohn's disease. After she developed peripheral bilateral facial
paresis
, bilateral hypoacusia, hypotonia, tetraparesis and diminished osteotendinous reflexes at the legs, the patient was admitted in our department. Several lumbar punctures were performed but no specific disease could be detected. The MRI performed showed pachymeningeal and leptomeningeal inflammation. Tuberculous meningitis was taken into consideration and the patient was transferred into an Infectious Disease Department where this diagnostic was infirmed. The patient was retransferred into the Department of Neurology where after an episode of hematemesis she had a cardiac arrest and deceased. Inflammatory bowel disease may involve different segments of the intestine, and may be accompanied by a variety of conditions, such as neurologic findings, osteoarticular manifestations and also may be the starting point of a neoplastic process. The patient had an inflammatory bowel condition, which by the time it was appropriately diagnosed as being Crohn's disease, a neoplastic process spread to the meninges, causing multiple cranial nerve palsy, tetraparesis, along other neurological manifestations.
...
PMID:Meningeal carcinomatosis in a patient with Crohn's disease. 2533 48