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Query: UMLS:C0031154 (
peritonitis
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The autopsy findings in a pancreatoblastoma in a 7-year-old Japanese girl is reported. The tumour was in the head and body of the pancreas, and was associated with diffuse carcinomatous
peritonitis
and hepatic and pulmonary metastases. There was marked elevation (more than 10,000 ng/ml) of serum
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
). Histopathologically the tumour was composed of solid epithelial elements with fibrous stroma, showing acinar arrangement, squamoid clusters and tubular structures. The epithelial elements contained numerous fine PAS positive granules in the cytoplasm. Immunocytochemical results suggested epithelial differentiation with positivity to alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT), keratin, CA19-9, and
AFP
. No endocrine elements were recognized. Characteristic feature of this tumour are discussed and compared with previous reports.
...
PMID:Pancreatoblastoma with marked elevation of serum alpha-fetoprotein. An autopsy case report with immunocytochemical study. 168 89
The suspicion of prenatal meconium ileus syndrome was raised in a pregnancy in a family with no history of cystic fibrosis because of significantly higher maternal serum
alpha-fetoprotein
in the 16th and 19th week of gestation, dispersed areas with increased echogenity in the fetal abdomen, slight fetal ascites in the 24th-25th weeks of gestation, decreased amniotic fluid gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) activity and
alpha-fetoprotein
level in the 25th-26th weeks, and normal 46,XY karotype of the fetus. The detection of a homozygous deltaF508 cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) gene mutation, by means of PCR from a small amount of white blood cells and urine sediment cells, substantiated the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis in a prematurely delivered boy in the 28th week of gestation. The repeated sweat test was unsuccessful. The autopsy examination confirmed the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis. Fetal meconium ileus syndrome was complicated by
peritonitis
and by formation of a meconium pseudocyst. Direct PCR typing improves postnatal diagnostic possibilities in the early neonatal period in prematurely delivered babies when the sweat test is difficult to perform.
...
PMID:The direct early diagnosis of cystic fibrosis by the detection of the delta F508 CFTR gene mutation in a prematurely delivered boy. 170 42
Fetuses with Down's syndrome are more likely than normal fetuses to have a thickened nuchal skin fold and relatively short femurs on ultrasound examination in the second trimester. We evaluated these measures in more than 5500 fetuses, including 28 who were later found to have Down's syndrome by means of amniocentesis with cytogenetic analysis. Normal femur length was established as a function of biparietal diameter in 192 of the normal fetuses. We found that with use of a nuchal skin-fold thickness of 6 mm or more and a ratio of actual to expected femur length of 0.91 or less, fetuses with Down's syndrome could be identified with a sensitivity of 75 percent and a specificity of 98 percent. When other anomalies, such as an atrioventricular canal and meconium
peritonitis
, were added to these two criteria, the sensitivity of sonographic detection of Down's syndrome in the second-trimester fetus rose to 82 percent. The potential predictive value of these sonographic signs far exceeds that of advanced maternal age and low
alpha-fetoprotein
levels, which currently identify only 10 to 30 percent of affected fetuses. We recommend that fetuses with a thickened nuchal skin fold or shortened femurs on ultrasound examination be evaluated for Down's syndrome by amniocentesis and cytogenetic analysis.
...
PMID:Sonographic identification of second-trimester fetuses with Down's syndrome. 296 Aug 95
An epithelial cell line, NuE15-1, was established from the liver of a 24-week-old human fetus. The cells had round clear nuclei with clear (agranular) cytoplasm of polygonal shape and grew in a pavement-like manner. The karyotype was human and heteroploid. alpha-Fetoprotein and alpha 1-antitrypsin were detected in the concentrated culture medium but albumin was not. This may indicate the hepatocytic origin of the cell line. Malignant transformation was confirmed by xenotransplantability to nude mice. When inoculated intraperitoneally, the implanted cells caused lethal
peritonitis
carcinomatosa in 9 out of 10 mice within 3 weeks and liver metastasis was observed in one case. A possible role of
alpha-fetoprotein
-producing cells as precursors of tumor cells in hepatocarcinogenesis is discussed.
...
PMID:Establishment of a cell line from a human fetal liver and its xenotransplantation to nude mice. 616 1
An
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
)-producing human gastric carcinoma was transplanted into BALB/c-nu/nu nude mice. The original tumor tissue had been obtained by gastrectomy from a 72-year-old patient with gastric carcinoma. The tumor had been transplanted serially (20 passages) in nude mice. The transplantability was 100%. The doubling time of the tumor ranged from 5.6 days to 11.2 days.
AFP
appeared in the serum of nude mice 3 to 4 weeks after subcutaneous (sc) transplantation and 6 weeks after intraperitoneal (ip) transplantation of the tumor cell suspension prepared from sc transplanted tumors. A positive correlation was observed between serum
AFP
level and tumor size. Serum
AFP
level of mice given ip transplantation increased as a function of time after transplantation.
AFP
was stained positively by an immunochemical technique in the original and transplanted tumors and was located in the cytoplasms of the tumor cells. The histology of the original tumor was retained. The malignant potential of these transplanted tumor cells was expressed as carcinomatous
peritonitis
and liver and/or lung metastases.
...
PMID:Establishment of an alpha-fetoprotein-producing human gastric carcinoma in nude mice. 619 51
Three cases of spontaneous
peritonitis
due to Clostridium perfringens in cirrhotic patients with a fatal outcome are reported. The diagnosis was made clinically in two patients and by post-mortem examination in the third. One patient had elevated values of serum
alpha-fetoprotein
. These cases are compared with three other reported cases in the literature. Blood cultures were negative in the three patients, a fact that lends support to the theory of transmural migration of bacteria. In the authors' experience C. perfringens is the third most frequent agent responsible for spontaneous
peritonitis
in cirrhosis, preceded by E. coli and Streptococcus and followed by Klebsiella, a surprising fact given the scarce number of reported cases. Routine abdominal paracentesis is recommended in any cirrhotic patient with ascites, followed by appropriate antibiotic treatment whenever positive cultures are obtained. The efficacy of treatment is probably doubtful. The literature on antibiotic treatment of spontaneous
peritonitis
in cirrhosis is reviewed.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous peritonitis due to Clostridium perfringens in three patients with cirrhosis (author's transl)]. 626 Oct 49
A large number of ascitic fluid tests, e.g., fibronectin and cholesterol, have been proposed as helpful in detecting malignancy as the cause of ascites. Unfortunately, these "humoral tests of malignancy" are nonspecific. Although the ascitic fluid concentrations of these proteins or protein-bound substances tend to be quite high in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis and low in the setting of cirrhotic ascites, the problem is that patients with tuberculous
peritonitis
, cardiac ascites, pancreatitis ascites, etc. usually have values in the malignancy range, i.e., false-positive results. This can lead to an extensive search for a nonexistent tumor, with confusion and anxiety for patient and physician. The cytology is the single best test to order when peritoneal carcinomatosis is suspected; its sensitivity approaches 100%. However, peritoneal carcinomatosis is only one of several mechanisms by which tumors can cause ascites. No one test can be expected to detect tumors as the cause of these diverse mechanisms of ascites formation. The serum-ascites albumin gradient is a helpful test in classifying ascitic fluid specimens into portal-hypertension-related and non-portal-hypertension-related categories. An elevated serum
alpha-fetoprotein
test can be useful in raising suspicion of hepatocellular carcinoma. Careful analysis of ascitic fluid, without measurement of "humoral tests of malignancy," combined with information obtained from the history and physical examination, usually lead to an accurate diagnosis of the cause of ascites.
...
PMID:Malignancy-related ascites and ascitic fluid "humoral tests of malignancy". 818 30
Reported herein is a case of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with unusual peritoneal dissemination masquerading as peritoneal mesothelioma. A 61-year-old man was clinically found to have multiple tumors in his abdominal cavity;
peritonitis
carcinomatosa was suspected. An autopsy revealed numerous tumors of various sizes in the abdominal serosa, omentum, and diaphragm. No signs of tumor, fibrosis, or cirrhosis were found in the liver, except for a small nodule in the hepatic triangular ligament. Histologically, the tumor cells proliferated in thick trabeculae or in sheets and formed a few canaliculi and tubules with homogenously brown contents in their lumina, which stained positively with Hall stain. Immunohistochemically, these tumors were positive for hepatocyte,
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
) and low-molecular-weight cytokeratin; were focally positive for pan-cytokeratin and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA); and were negative for high-molecular-weight cytokeratin, vimentin, and calretinin. Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) produced a bile canalicular immunohistochemical staining pattern. Thus, the tumor was diagnosed as an HCC (Edmondson II type) of the triangular ligament with massive peritoneal dissemination. The origin of this tumor and its differential diagnosis (malignant mesothelioma, hepatoid adenocarcinoma, and hepatoid yolk sac tumor) are discussed.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma with mesothelioma-like dissemination. 1627 Oct 87