Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0035412 (rhabdomyosarcoma)
6,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eight patients with breast metastases from primary tumors other than breast carcinoma were studied: 3 malignant melanomas, 2 rhabdomyosarcomas, 1 malignant mesothelioma, 1 appendiceal carcinoid, and 1 epidermoid cervical carcinoma. All had mammographic, histopathologic, and immunohistochemical examinations. The main problem was differential diagnosis from primary breast carcinoma. History of extramammary primary tumor was helpful but breast metastasis was the first clinical feature in 2 cases. Patients had noticed palpable, round, rapid growth masses which were mammographically benign. Pathologic diagnosis was difficult and immunohistochemical studies necessary, whenever the proliferation had histologic features of primary breast carcinoma or when no primary tumor was known. However, some histologic features were of value for diagnosis of metastasis: atypical histologic features for a primary breast carcinoma, a well-circumscribed tumor with multiple satellite foci, the absence of an intraductal component, and the presence of many lymphatic emboli. In adults, the most frequent types of tumors metastasizing in the breast are malignant melanoma and neuroendocrine-like tumors, especially small cell carcinoma and carcinoid. In children, rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common. Accurate diagnosis of breast metastasis is important to avoid unnecessary mastectomy and to implement an appropriate systemic therapy.
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PMID:Metastases to the breast: differential diagnosis from primary breast carcinoma. 192 96

We present a widely metastatic islet cell tumor of the pancreas with focal areas resembling rhabdomyosarcoma. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of islet cell/carcinoid tumor exhibiting such differentiation. Desmin was localized to the rhabdoid areas by immunohistochemistry. Cross striations were not seen by light microscopy, but Z-lines and thick filaments were seen on electron microscopy.
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PMID:Malignant islet cell tumor with rhabdomyosarcomatous differentiation. 254 Jun 63

Nonchromaffin paraganglioma (NCP), also called glomus body tumor or chemodectoma, is rarely found in the orbit. The behavior of orbital nonchromaffin paraganglioma may potentially be more aggressive than in other head and neck locations. Diagnosis depends on electron microscopic demonstration of membrane-bound neurosecretory granules. Results of histopathologic study show a well-circumscribed lesion without a true capsule with alveolar or organoid arrangements of epithelioid cells within a reticulin framework with thin-walled blood vessels. Cells are polygonal with round or oval nuclei containing rare mitotic figures and pale-staining cytoplasm. Differential diagnosis includes alveolar soft-part sarcoma, alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, neuroblastoma, carcinoid, and granular cell tumor. Of 29 previously reported cases of orbital NCP, 16 have been reclassified as alveolar soft-part sarcoma. The authors report a patient with an electron microscopically established orbital NCP, with the history of a contralateral glomus jugulare tumor irradiated 14 years previously.
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PMID:Orbital nonchromaffin paraganglioma. A case report and review of the literature. 255 86

Twenty cases of metastatic neoplasms in the breast were identified in a series of 1,034 fine-needle aspirations (FNAs) of the breast, of which 389 were malignant. Patients with breast carcinomas in whom metastasis to the contralateral breast developed were excluded from this study. This series consisted of 17 women and 3 men, ranging in age from 28 to 63 years (mean, 49 years). The tumors included oat cell carcinoma (three), melanoma (three), ovarian serous carcinoma (one), bronchogenic adenocarcinoma and squamous carcinoma (four and two, respectively), lymphoma (two), carcinoid (two), transitional cell carcinoma (one), plasma cell myeloma (one), and rhabdomyosarcoma (one). In two patients, the breast mass was the first manifestation of an extramammary cancer (two adenocarcinoma of the lung). Eleven patients died of disseminated cancer shortly after the breast metastasis was diagnosed. In most cases, the aspirates displayed the cytologic features characteristic of the primary tumors, thereby establishing the metastatic nature of the neoplasm. In four cases (two carcinoids, one myeloma, and one rhabdomyosarcoma), the cytologic features were difficult to differentiate from a primary breast carcinoma; however, the final diagnosis was established by electron microscopic examination and immunocytochemical studies on the aspirates. One case (adenocarcinoma of the lung) was misdiagnosed as primary breast carcinoma on both FNA and mastectomy specimen. Because metastatic neoplasms in the breast may mimic primary breast tumors, the authors recommend the following: (1) Evaluation of FNA of breast should be done with complete knowledge of the patient's clinical history. (2) The possibility of metastasis should be suspected in lesions with unusual cytologic patterns. (3) Ancillary studies on FNA can be helpful in interpreting selected cases.
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PMID:Fine-needle aspiration cytology of metastatic neoplasms in the breast. 275 Jul 5

Ultrastructures of 25 tumors were analyzed by electron microscopy (EM). Of the 25 cases, there were 9 amine precursor uptake and decarboxylation tumors (APUD) (2 carotid body tumor, 2 medullary carcinoma of thyroid and 5 carcinoid) in which the dense core granules of different sizes were seen in the cytoplasm. 4 cases of malignant melanoma were identified by EM basing on the premelanosome and melanosome in the cells. In 4 carcinomas from different locations, 2 had mucous secretory granules in the cytoplasm and junction complex between the tumor cells. The diagnosis was finally confirmed as adenocarcinoma. The other 2 cases were identified as epidermoid carcinoma or anaplastic carcinoma as desmosome and tonofilaments were found. 4 cases of malignant lymphoma without any cell junction complex were identified. Moreover, there were several cases of mesenchymal cell tumors, such as leiomyoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, chordoma and Schwannoma confirmed by their special organelles. This study shows that the ultrastructural analysis is valuable in the differential diagnosis and classification of tumors.
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PMID:[Ultrastructural analysis in differential diagnosis of tumors]. 324 84

The authors presents an updated review of rare malignant tumours of the prostate other than adenocarcinoma, as well as of some diagnostic problems caused by inflammatory pseudotumours. Sarcomas, particularly rhabdomyosarcoma (in childhood) and leiomyosarcoma, represent 0.1 to 0.2% of all prostatic malignant neoplasms. Sarcomas show early local extension and vascular invasion. Treatment consists of combined surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Other types of even rarer tumours, either primary or metastatic, have also been described in the prostate (carcinoid, malignant melanoma, malignant lymphoma). Finally, some inflammatory and pseudotumours of the prostate (different forms of prostatitis, abcess, infarction) can mimick carcinoma.
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PMID:[Rare malignant tumors and pseudotumors of the prostate]. 407 11

Primary tumors of the lung rarely occur in children. However, 230 well-documented cases, including the 2 presented in this review, have been identified in the English-language literature. One hundred fifty-one tumors in these reports were classified as malignant lesions and 79 as benign neoplasms. Bronchial "adenomas" constituted the largest group; most of these lesions were of the carcinoid variety, and 8% were definitely malignant. Forty-seven cases of bronchogenic carcinoma were reported in children under 16 years of age, although there were few squamous cell tumors (12%). Fifty-six percent of the benign tumors were classified as inflammatory pseudotumor. Most of the children in this collective series were seen with symptoms related to bronchial irritation or obstruction, such as cough, hemoptysis, atelectasis, or pneumonitis. Respiratory distress was an unusual symptom that was often associated with large tumors seen in the neonatal period. Approximately 20% of the children were totally symptomatic. The limited survival data that are available indicate that leiomyosarcoma and mucoepidermoid carcinoma have a more favorable prognosis in children than in adults. Survival with bronchial carcinoid tumors (90%), bronchogenic carcinoma (30%), and pulmonary blastoma (45%) appears to parallel that for adults. The experience with pulmonary rhabdomyosarcoma, as described in this review, emphasizes the importance of early diagnosis and the use of combined modes of therapy in the approach to these malignancies. Despite the rarity of primary pulmonary neoplasms in children, this diagnosis should be considered in young patients with solitary pulmonary masses or persistent, atypical pulmonary symptoms. It is hoped that early diagnosis will result in an improved prognosis and prevent life-threatening complications.
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PMID:Primary pulmonary neoplasms of childhood: a review. 634 22

Only about 2% of the urinary tract are not of urothelial origin. Our knowledge of their morphology and biology is mainly based on single case reports, and therefore apart from a few exceptions very poor. Generally, the most often affected site is the urinary bladder (79.2%), followed by the urethra (12.7%), pelvis (4.9%) and ureter (3.2%). The urinary bladder also is the only organ in which all different histological types of these tumors were described. According to their histogenesis non-urothelial tumors (NUT) can be classified by the following main groups: soft tissue tumors, mixed epithelial and non epithelial tumors (carcinosarcomas), neuroendocrine carcinomas, carcinoids, malignant lymphomas, malignant melanomas and extragonadal germ cell tumors. Moreover some very interesting tumor-like lesions, like malakoplakia and inflammatory pseudosarcoma, mainly occur in this region. About 75% of all NUT of the urinary tract belong to the soft tissue tumors. Rhabdomyosarcomas in children and leiomyomas and -myosarcomas in adults are the more frequent histological types. Leiomyosarcomas can easily be confused with other tumor types or even with inflammatory pseudotumors. The use of immunohistochemistry to achieve a correct diagnosis is mandatory but not always successful. A relatively frequent tumor occurring in the bladder of young adults is the paraganglioma (pheochromocytoma), which usually produces typical symptoms of catecholamine excess. Carcinosarcomas of the urinary bladder contain both epithelial and mesenchymal components. They have to be distinguished from collision tumors (coexistent but separate carcinoma and sarcoma), spindle cell transitional carcinomas as well as from carcinomas with osseous or cartilaginous metaplasia. Carcinoids and neuroendocrine carcinomas developed from the neuroendocrine cells scattered all over the transitional epithelium of the bladder. Neuroendocrine carcinomas of the bladder are also called "oat cell carcinomas" since they show the same histological features and immunoreactivity as the oat cell carcinomas of the lung. They share also the same poor prognosis. The affection of the urinary tract in generalized malignant lymphomas and leukemias occur in more than 30% of cases. Lymphomas, primarily localised in the urinary bladder are, however, extremely rare. The most frequent ones are low grade non Hodgkin lymphomas, although 3 cases of Hodgkin disease and a few cases of primary extramedullary plasmacytoma of the bladder have been reported, too.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Non-urothelial tumors of the urinary tract]. 751 Dec 78

Sarcomatoid carcinomas of the lung are uncommon malignant biphasic tumors composed of carcinomatous and sarcomatous components. The carcinomatous component is usually a squamous carcinoma, and the sarcomatous component usually resembles a fibrosarcoma or a malignant fibrous histiocytoma. The presence of rhabdomyoblastic differentiation in such neoplasms is exceedingly rare, with only seven documented cases. This report describes a unique case of sarcomatoid carcinoma in a 52-year-old woman in whom the sarcomatous component of the tumor was a rhabdomyosarcoma and the carcinomatous component was an atypical carcinoid. The authors know of no previous report of a sarcomatoid carcinoma of the lung in which the carcinomatous component is a carcinoid.
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PMID:Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the lung. A case with atypical carcinoid and rhabdomyosarcomatous components. 808 61

Nine children (6 boys, 3 girls) were diagnosed with a primary endobronchial or pulmonary parenchymal neoplasm. The average age at diagnosis was 9 years. Presenting complaints included cough (7), fever (5), pulmonary infection (3), respiratory distress (3), weight loss (2), pain (2), and hemoptysis (1). Pulmonary x-rays showed persistent atelectasis, pneumonic infiltrates or mass lesions. A computed tomography scan was performed in 8. Five of six endobronchial tumors were diagnosed with bronchoscopy and biopsy. Treatment consisted of thoracotomy and pulmonary resection in 7 cases and laser resection in 2. The pathologic diagnoses were bronchial carcinoid (3), bronchial mucoepidermoid carcinoma (1), inflammatory pseudotumor (plasma cell granuloma) of the bronchus (2) and of the lung parenchyma (1), fibrosarcoma (1), and rhabdomyosarcoma (1). Postoperative chemotherapy was given only to the patient with pulmonary rhabdomyosarcoma; this child died. One child has developed a local recurrence while 7 children are alive and free of disease at an average of 2.4 years postresection. Pulmonary neoplasms are unusual in the pediatric age group and represent a wide spectrum of pathology. Including the present series, 383 tumors have been described. Seventy-six percent were malignant. Early investigation and surgical intervention are essential in children with persistent pulmonary symptoms or x-ray abnormalities. In most cases, the prognosis is excellent with complete surgical resection; however, malignancies other than bronchial adenoma are associated with significantly mortality.
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PMID:Childhood primary pulmonary neoplasms. 830 77


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