Gene/Protein
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Due to the considerable progress made by instrumental total body diagnostics (ECO,
CAT
, RMN, angiography, etc.) in recent years heart surgery has increasingly often been used to treat pathologies which are not primarily cardiac but which see the involvement of the heart and large vessels in the advanced stages of cancer and non-cancer diseases of other organs or apparatus. This is the case of malignant renal or adrenal tumours which infiltrate along the caval lumen until they reach the right atrium. In these cases caval and atrial involvement must be seen as a
prolapse
of the tumour and not a long-distance metastasis: prognosis only appears to be linked to the hemodynamic impairment caused by the obstacle to systemic lower venous drainage. On the bases of this observation radical surgery may be justified at a renal, caval and cardiac level. The authors report their preliminary experience in 6 patients with renal cancer (4 renal carcinoma, 1 Wilm's tumour, 1 adrenal carcinoma) who underwent combined surgery, in a single stage, involving enlarged nephrectomny and caval and atrial thrombectomy, the latter performed in profound hypothermia and cardiocirculatory arrest. Two patients died later and 4 are living, in good condition and with perviousness of the lower caval venous drainage. Similar to other analogous experience reported in the literature, the authors suggest taking a combined approach performed in a single stage into consideration for these patients.
...
PMID:[Neoplastic caval and intracardiac thrombosis secondary to reno-adrenal tumors. One-stage surgical treatment in deep hypothermia and cardiocirculatory arrest]. 797 82
Prognosis in prostate cancer is determined, in greater part, by the presence of metastases. Bone metastases can occur in any part of the skeleton even, for example, at the base of the skull. We present a case of a 78 year old male who, in December 2001, presented with paralysis of the third cranial nerve. The NMR and
CAT
scans were normal and circulating levels of PSA were elevated. He was referred to the Urology Service where the treatment guidelines included complete androgen block. Subsequently, he developed retro-orbital pain, divergent strabismus and palpebral
ptosis
.
CAT
and NMR indicated a soft tissue mass at the sphenoid level. Treatment was Gamma Knife Radio-surgery. Since August 2004, in conjunction with the latest rise in PSA, the patients general status deteriorated considerably and he was referred to the Oncology Service. There was an increase in the paralysis of the third, fourth and sixth cranial nerve (complete left ophthalmoplegia) and left-central facial paralysis. Metastases from prostate cancer can be disseminated via the lymphatic or the blood system. Currently, there are more metastases from large-size tumours. Metastases are critical in prostate cancer because of their adverse effect on the patients survival. Measurements of circulating levels of prostate specific antigen and prostate acid phosphatase are very useful in the clinical diagnosis of the primary tumour, or its metastases.
...
PMID:[Ophthalmoplegia in a patient with prostate cancer and bone metastases]. 1623 78