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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (
gastric ulcer
)
5,179
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a clinical case of a double primitive tumour (right kidney clear cell carcinoma and gastric carcinoma) in two brothers. There is no history of cancer in the parents. Both patients were previously affected by
gastric ulcer
. No report of association between the two neoplasms was found in literature. The age of the patients (61 and 70 years) and the singleness of the kidney tumour seem to exclude the case of a familial kidney cancer. The neoplastic transformation of the
gastric ulcer
is instead a quite frequent report with an incidence of about 1%. Alterations of oncogenes or tumour suppressor genes shared from both
neoplasm
are at present still unknown. Nevertheless molecular analysis of patients' neoplastic genome could point out typical chromosome translocations/deletions or gene mutations.
...
PMID:[Appearance in 2 brothers of double primary neoplasms: right renal carcinoma and gastric adenocarcinoma]. 757 Feb 61
Obstructive jaundice due to hilar cholangiocarcinoma is difficult to decompress because of the location of the
tumor
. We used external radiation alone for biliary decompression and reviewed its efficacy in this study. Subjects comprised 14 patients diagnosed as having inoperable hilar cholangiocarcinoma by ultrasonography, percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography, and CT scanning. The total bilirubin level on admission ranged from 0.4 to 34.6 mg/dl (mean: 11.0 mg/dl). These patients were irradiated with a 4MeV linear accelerator using parallel opposing fields measuring from 7 x 7 cm to 8 x 10 cm. The total radiation dose ranged from 50 Gy to 60 Gy and in fractions of 1.8-2.0 Gy per day. No patient underwent further biliary decompression after percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography, and irradiation was performed immediately after diagnosis. Eleven of the 14 patients received the full dose of external radiation. Three patients discontinued radiotherapy because of severe vomiting and nausea, pneumonia, and a hemorrhagic
gastric ulcer
. In 10 of the 11 patients, the serum total bilirubin level returned to normal (p < 0.005) and no cholangitis occurred. Obstructive jaundice recurred in one patient, and serum total bilirubin returned to normal again after further irradiation. Eight of the 11 patients could be discharged from hospital and returned to society. The survival time of the 11 patients ranged from 3 to 25 months and the 12-month survival rate was 50% (Kaplan-Meier method). This study suggests that external radiation therapy is an effective treatment for biliary decompression in patients with unresectable hilar cholangiocarcinoma.
...
PMID:External radiotherapy for biliary decompression of hilar cholangiocarcinoma. 759 May 76
A total of 2241 patients who had an operation for duodenal ulcer between 1947 and 1968 were followed up to determine the cause of death and to compare the observed number of deaths with the expected. Death certificates were traced for 1251 of 1387 known to have died. Observed deaths from all causes were significantly greater than expected (O/E 1.13) (95% CI 1.08 to 1.20). This was because of significant increases in deaths from neoplasms (O/E 1.25) (95% CI 1.13 to 1.39) and digestive diseases (O/E 1.71) (95% CI 1.11 to 2.59). Analysis of deaths from malignant disease showed an excess of deaths from carcinoma of lung (O/E 1.37) (95% CI 1.14 to 1.62) and from smoking related cancers (O/E 1.32) (95% CI 1.13 to 1.52) but there was no significant excess mortality from any other
neoplasm
. An excess of deaths within one year of the operation was seen from circulatory disease (O/E 1.85) (95% CI 1.17 to 2.78), respiratory disease (O/E 3.56) (95% CI 1.78 to 6.37), and digestive disease (O/E 21.46) (95% CI 13.75 to 31.93). These deaths are concentrated in the first postoperative month and as there is no excess mortality from circulatory, respiratory or digestive disease between 1 and 20 years postoperatively, show the direct effects of the operation as a cause of death. This together with the excess mortality from all respiratory disease confirms that excess mortality after duodenal ulcer surgery is, in the short term, the result of the operation itself and in the long term largely attributable to cigarette smoking. Operations for
gastric ulcer
largely account for the subsequent excess mortality from gastric cancer reported after peptic ulcer surgery. The findings do not support the theory that the operation has carcinogenic effects and do not support the case for routine endoscopic screening after operations for duodenal ulcer.
...
PMID:Death from malignant disease after surgery for duodenal ulcer. 782 98
The appearance of gastrointestinal wall thickening of various entities is demonstrated on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The entities include benign
gastric ulcer
, gastric carcinoma, pancreatic carcinoma with direct invasion of stomach, duodenal leiomyoma, radiation enteritis, peritonitis, colonic carcinoma, recurrent carcinoma at the gastrojejunal anastomosis with direct extension to the transverse colon, colocolic intussusception, sigmoid diverticulitis with pericolonic abscess and fistula into the urinary bladder, and lymphoma of the stomach, duodenum, small bowel, and colon. Air was introduced antegradedly or retrogradedly into the alimentary tract to act as a contrast agent. When the bowel was distended by air, the normal bowel wall was barely visible or even invisible. Abnormal focal or segmental wall thickening was outlined between the intraluminal air and extraluminal fat. In some instances, the thickenings were better demonstrated on coronal or sagittal sections. The proper muscular layer of the bowel has a low-signal intensity and was delineated between the thickened mucosa-submucosa and extramural fat. Interruption of this low-intensity zone might represent
tumor
invasion through the muscular layer.
...
PMID:MRI manifestations of gastrointestinal wall thickening. 795 Aug 12
This is China's pilot study in the assessment of the diagnostic value of serum soluble IL-2 receptor (sIL-2R) in gastric cancer. We measured its level by ELISA method in 45 patients with gastric cancer (without metastasis: 32; with metastasis: 5; recurrence: 8) 27
gastric ulcer
, 27 superficial gastritis and 44 healthy controls. The mean-serum sIL-2R levels were significantly elevated in cancer patients, those with metastasis showed even higher levels than those without metastasis. These results suggested that sIL-2R can be used as a marker of host biological response in gastric cancer patients as well as a
tumor
marker for the diagnosis of the disease.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of elevated serum soluble interleukin-2 receptor in gastric cancer. 808 90
Patients who undergo a gastric or duodenal operation present challenging problems to the physician. Currently, gastric or duodenal operations are performed to correct peptic ulcer disease and its complications, resect benign or malignant masses, and control obesity. Indications for surgery in patients with peptic ulcer disease include hemorrhage, perforation, obstruction, ulcer intractability, and the inability to exclude malignancy in a
gastric ulcer
.
Neoplasms
of the stomach and duodenum require resection, depending on their benign or malignant nature, their location, the extent of disease, and the underlying physiologic status of the patient. Most clinically significant gastroduodenal masses are malignant and require formal anatomic resection, usually with distal or total gastrectomy. Stapling procedures have been shown to be effective in reducing excess body weight with creation of a small gastric pouch to restrict the outlet and cause early satiety, decreased caloric intake, and weight loss. Reliable radiologic findings depend on a thorough understanding of the complex anatomic and physiologic alterations that occur after surgery and familiarity with appropriate techniques of examination. With this background, complications unique to the surgical procedure as well as general complications found in all postoperative patients with be detected quickly and accurately.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the postoperative stomach and duodenum. 812 67
Autonomic dysreflexia is a poorly understood entity, typically occurring in the spinal cord-injured patient, with paroxysmal hypertension, bradycardia, severe throbbing headache, anxiety and sweating above the level of the lesion. An 18-year-old man underwent removal of a hemangioblastoma from the inferior portion of the fourth ventricle, a region known as the area postrema. Postoperatively he exhibited signs of autonomic failure. He later developed recurrent paroxysmal episodes of abdominal pain, hypertension, skin flushing and headaches. He subsequently was found to have a
gastric ulcer
. Symptoms and signs significantly improved with its treatment. We postulate that diminished sympathetic outflow occurred as a result of the surgery, creating a situation similar to the spinal cord-injured patient. Autonomic dysreflexia was elicited as a consequence of the noxious input of the
gastric ulcer
. In other cases of brainstem
tumor
resection, unrecognized episodes of autonomic dysreflexia may occur. This case also indicates that sympathetic supraspinal control is located at the level of the medulla or higher.
...
PMID:Autonomic dysreflexia after brainstem tumor resection. A case report. 826 Jan 35
N-Methyl-N-nitro-N'-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) is a gastric carcinogen in several animal species and has been used in a number of systems to dissect the co-carcinogenic potential of various compounds in the induction of gastric adenocarcinoma. Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that Helicobacter pylori may play a role as a co-carcinogen in the etiology of this
tumor
in humans and we have been interested in developing an animal model to study this possibility. A related organism, H. mustelae, naturally colonizes the ferret stomach and causes persistent chronic gastritis. The pathology elicited by H. mustelae in ferrets has many similarities with the human disease including different stages of multifocal atrophic gastritis which underlie the
gastric ulcer
and gastric carcinoma syndrome. There is little evidence, however, demonstrating the susceptibility of ferrets toward chemical carcinogenesis. We have consequently undertaken a study to ascertain whether 10 6-month-old female ferrets given a single oral dose of MNNG (50-100 mg/kg) would develop adenocarcinoma of the stomach. Five age-matched unmanipulated control animals were included for comparative purposes. All 15 ferrets were infected with H. mustelae. Nine of 10 ferrets dosed with MNNG developed gastric adenocarcinoma (29-55 months after dosing), while none of the five historical control ferrets examined an average of 63 months after the initiation of the study developed gastric tumors. By comparison, we have not observed gastric adenocarcinoma, nor has it been reported, in > 10 years of observation of untreated ferrets naturally infected with H. mustelae. The H. mustelae-infected ferret, with demonstrated susceptibility to a gastric carcinogen, plus the recent availability of specific pathogen-free ferrets, should now allow longitudinal studies in vivo to probe the role of Helicobacter in the development of gastric cancer.
...
PMID:MNNG-induced gastric carcinoma in ferrets infected with Helicobacter mustelae. 840 24
We report a case of adrenal myelolipoma occurring in a 58-year-old-woman. A
tumor
was incidentally detected in the right adrenal region by ultrasonography during admission to our hospital due to
gastric ulcer
. Ultrasonography revealed punctate calcification within the
tumor
. No endocrinologic abnormalities were demonstrated. CT revealed a nonhomogenous mass 5 cm in diameter that consisted of tissue with a fatty density and areas of calcifications. Retrograde femoral angiography demonstrated that the
tumor
was relatively hypervascular. Large blood vessels resembled sinusoids that were demonstrated by pooling of the contrast medium. Right adrenalectomy was performed. The histological diagnosis was adrenal myelolipoma.
...
PMID:[A case of adrenal myelolipoma incidentally discovered on abdominal ultrasonography]. 846 May 83
From October 1991 to July 1992, endoscopic ultrasound examination (EUS) was performed preoperatively in 30 patients with gastrointestinal disease with a new forward-view fiber optic gastroscope with a 5 and 7.5 MHz curved-array linear transducer mounted directly behind the lens. Before EUS examination, endoscopy with biopsy had established the diagnosis of gastric disease in 22 cases: 16 adenocarcinoma, 4 lymphoma, 1 carcinoid
tumor
and 1 gastric metastasis of a chorionic tumor. In the 8 other cases, endoscopic diagnosis with non productive biopsy was
gastric ulcer
(1 case), submucosal
tumor
(5 cases), and large fold gastritis (2 cases). EUS established a correct diagnosis in 6 of these 8 cases (2 leiomyoma, 1 lipoma, 1 lymphoma, 2 gastric linitis). Correct preoperative TN staging was accomplished by EUS in 83.3% and correct preoperative staging for N was accomplished by EUS in 90%. This study shows that EUS a curved-array transducer is useful in preoperative TN staging of gastric tumors.
...
PMID:[Electronic sectorial ultrasound endoscopy in benign and malignant tumoral pathology of the stomach. Results in 30 patients]. 846 67
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