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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nineteen patients with low-grade malignant tumors of the tracheobronchial tree received Nd:YAG laser treatment. They were referred for palliation of symptomatic airway obstruction due to
carcinoid
(14 cases) or adenocystic carcinoma (five cases). In all patients, laser treatment was followed by symptomatic relief. Fifteen patients have done well and remain in good condition between six months and four years after laser photoresection. Two of the five patients with adenocystic carcinoma died because of hemoptysis at one and 49 months after laser therapy. In the group of 14 patients with carcinoids, two episodes of bleeding (more than 250 ml) occurred that were controlled by tamponade with the tube and coagulation by the laser beam itself. Two patients with
carcinoid
died of unrelated causes (
stroke
and gastric carcinoma).
...
PMID:Nd:YAG laser photoresection of low-grade malignant tumors of the tracheobronchial tree. 215 87
Release of hormones peri-operatively in patients with metastatic carcinoids may lead to severe circulatory and respiratory disturbances. Fourteen patients with liver metastases were studied during 16 operations with a modified neurolept anaesthesia in order to evaluate the central haemodynamic and respiratory functions as well as plasma serotonin levels. The premedication in five patients was supplemented with levopromazine. During the 11 operations performed on patients not pretreated with levopromazine, no major significant fluctuations in circulatory or respiratory functions were recorded although big variations in serotonin plasma levels were measured. In the patients treated with levopromazine, however, significant changes were observed in heart rate, mean pulmonary artery pressure, cardiac index, and left and right ventricular
stroke
work especially during flushing episodes. However, these changes did not correlate with the changes in plasma serotonin levels. Modified neurolept anaesthesia without levopromazine pretreatment combined with careful monitoring seems to be a safe procedure for
carcinoid
patients. Using this type of anaesthetic procedure only one major complication occurred in connexion with 16 major operations and then in the postoperative period.
...
PMID:Circulation, respiration and serotonin levels in carcinoid patients during neurolept anaesthesia. 663 41
The cardiac valvular surgical experience of patients in the Duke
Carcinoid
Database was reviewed to assess operative outcome. Of the 604 patients in the database, 19 patients with
carcinoid
heart disease were identified by cardiac catheterization or echocardiography, or both. Eight of these underwent tricuspid valve replacement surgery with bioprostheses (2 also had open pulmonic valvuloplasty). Compared with patients medically managed, surgically treated patients were similar with the exception that they had higher right atrial mean (17 +/- 6 vs 9 +/- 4 mm Hg, p = 0.03) and v-wave (27 +/- 6 vs 17 +/- 7 mm Hg, p = 0.04) pressures. Of the 8 surgical patients, 5 (63%) died within 30 days. Causes of death included tricuspid valve thrombosis,
cerebral vascular accident
, coagulopathy, renal failure, and intractable right heart failure. High comorbidity was present in all 8 patients. There was a weak trend (p = 0.17) toward lower Charlson comorbidity indexes in survivors (6.7 +/- 0.6) compared with nonsurvivors (7.6 +/- 0.9). Age was significantly lower (p = 0.036) in survivors (46 +/- 13 years) compared with nonsurvivors (69 +/- 4 years). Extended follow-up revealed 2 patients who survived beyond a decade. Review of 47
carcinoid
valve replacement cases (Duke
Carcinoid
Database and 39 published cases) revealed a 30-day mortality of 56% for patients > 60 years of age, and 0% for those < or = 60 years of age (p < 0.0001). Although valve replacement surgery can afford prolonged palliation from
carcinoid
heart disease, it is associated with a significant mortality risk. Careful preoperative risk stratification by age and comorbidity may provide a means for optimal selection of surgical candidates.
...
PMID:Predictors of outcome of tricuspid valve replacement in carcinoid heart disease. 786 94
The case presented describes a metastatic
carcinoid
in the cerebral hemisphere of a 52-year-old woman. The onset of the disease was in the form of
stroke
, CT-examination showed hemorrhagic focus and edema. A craniotomy was carried out and the lesion was removed. Histological diagnosis stated that the tumor was a
carcinoid
accompanied by a massive hemorrhage. Two and a half months later, another CT-examination revealed a second tumor in proximity to the site of operation, which was then treated palliatively by means of Co 60 radiation. The patient died 1.5 months later. General autopsy showed two other neoplastic tumors: a smaller one in the left lung and a bigger one (possible primary) in the stomach. In the report special attention was paid to an unusual cellular polymorphism especially prominent in the tumor formerly irradiated.
...
PMID:Metastatic carcinoid tumor in the brain. 788 44
During the period 1977-95, 20 patients underwent surgery for
carcinoid
tumour in the bronchus at the University Hospital of Trondheim (n = 16) and Innherred County Hospital (n = 4). All the tumours were typical
carcinoid
tumours. Median age of the patients was 41 years (range 16-78 years). The observation period averaged 7.5 years (0.5-18 years). The most common symptoms were cough, dyspnoea, wheezing and pneumonia. One patient had carcinoid syndrome. Chest X-ray were negative in three of the patients. Bronchoscopy was carried out in all the patients. Biopsies were taken in ten of them, and the diagnosis was conclusive in five cases. Lateral thoracotomy was performed in all the patients. The surgical procedures were lobectomy (15), segmental/wedge resection (3), bronchotomy with tumour resection (1) and sleeve resection (1). 19 patients were still alive at the time of follow-up, with no tumour recurrence. One patient died from cerebral
stroke
eight years after surgery. Good long-term results were found, and the study supports the use of limited lung resection or bronchoplasty operations to treat
carcinoid
tumour in the bronchus if the primary tumour is localised and there are no metastases.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of carcinoid bronchial tumor]. 923 5
The plasma soluble melanins (PSM) form spontaneously in vitro and in vivo and their formation involves oxidative polymerization and copolymerization of dopa, catecholamines, homogentisic acid, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, p-aminophenol, p-phenylenediamine, and other end(ex)ogenous ortho and para polyhydroxy-, (poly)hydroxy(poly)amino- and polyamino-phenyl compounds. The build up of PSM is visible within 2-3 h after the start of incubation at 37 degrees C with 1 mg/ml of plasma. PSM also form similarly in blood and these processes cause hemolysis. The mean quantity of PSM in normal human plasma is 1.61+/-0.1 (S.D.) mg/ml (n = 20) and in normal human urine is 1.1+/-1.2 g/24 h collection (n = 8). They contribute to the yellow color of plasma and urine. Antioxidants delay the formation of PSM. The deposited melanins also form from these precursors. Reactive oxygen side products (ROSP) are generated during and after melanogenesis. Melanins in vivo are generally associated with proteins or with proteins and lipids. The PSM-protein-lipid complexes are called plasma soluble lipofuscins (PSL), because they have histochemical and fluorescence properties similar to those of solid lipofuscins. The soluble and deposited melanins (SDM) and their intermediates have similar toxic chemical reactivities. The oxidizing quinoid (they can produce partially and completely substituted conjugates) and the semiquinoid free radical intermediates are also moieties in most human melanin structures. Soluble melanins formed from dopa, or dopamine, or norepinephrine in weak alkaline solution have been shown to be toxic to human CD4+ lymphoblastic cells (MT-2) at higher than 10 microg/ml concentrations. Alkaptonuria with high levels of homogentisic acid in the plasma is a potentially fatal disease, exhibiting the toxic effects of the homogentisic acid melanin (soluble and deposited), its intermediates and the ROSP. Patients with alkaptonuria develop arthritis and often suffer from other diseases too, including cardiovascular disease (frequent cause of death) and kidney disease. Pheochromocytoma, with high levels of catecholamines in the plasma is another potentially fatal disease. The catecholamine PSM of pheochromocytoma have very light yellow or practically no colors, due to the concentrations and chemical structures. Pheochromocytomas can cause hypertension, cardiovascular disease (frequent cause of death), kidney disease,
stroke
, cancer, amyloid formation and can mimic many other diseases, including acute pancreatitis,
carcinoid
, neuroblastoma, psychiatric illness, hypercalcemia, retinal vascular lesions, and diabetes mellitus. Pheochromocytoma is potentially fatal even in patients without hypertension. Following trauma and surgery, heavily pigmented eyes are apt to experience greater inflammation than lightly pigmented eyes. In Parkinson's disease those neurons are lost first in the substantia nigra and locus ceruleus which contain the greatest amounts of neuromelanins. The antihypertensive alphamethyldopa causes Parkinson's syndrome. It forms PSM in a short time in vitro. The side effects of L-dopa (immobility episodes alternate with normal or involuntary movements; psychotic abnormalities) suggest that the SDM, their intermediates and the ROSP present naturally in vivo are involved in the cause of Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease. There is a large overlap between these two diseases. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:The probable involvement of soluble and deposited melanins, their intermediates and the reactive oxygen side-products in human diseases and aging. 1124 35
A 69-year-old woman was admitted with facial flushing, weight loss and intermittent diarrhoea. Urinary 5-hydroxyindole-acetic acid (5-HIAA) level was elevated at 200 micromol/24 h (normal: < 50). Computerized tomography (CT) demonstrated multiple enhancing liver metastases with biopsy proven
carcinoid
metastases with no evidence of primary tumour at this stage. Octreotide was initiated, resulting in marked improvement in
carcinoid
symptoms. Nine years later, she presented with abdominal pain and slightly deranged liver function tests. Repeat colonoscopy at this stage, showed an ileal tumour causing impending obstruction, necessitating urgent right hemicolectomy. Histology demonstrated primary
carcinoid
tumour. She continued on octreotide. Three years later at the age of 81 years, she suffered a fatal haemorrhagic
stroke
. Autopsy revealed complete regression of hepatic
carcinoid
metastases.
...
PMID:Complete histological regression of metastatic carcinoid tumour after treatment with octreotide. 1115 85
Sudden unexpected cardiac death is the leading cause of death in industrialized countries. Patent foramen ovale and eustachian valve are two of cardiac diseases and they may be associated with clinical disorders as embolism,
stroke
, plathypnea-orthodeoxia syndrome,
carcinoid
heart disease, atrial flutter and endocarditis. The literature for the roles of patent foramen ovale and eustachian valve in the causes of sudden deaths are reviewed.
...
PMID:The role of eustachian valve and patent foramen ovale in sudden death. 1644 33
Carcinoid heart disease is a rare cause of heart failure with or without right valvular heart impairments. In this study, we showed a case of
carcinoid
tumour with hepatic metastases inducing
carcinoid
heart disease. Neuroendocrine heart involvement happens for severe tricuspid valve insufficiency and plaques on right ventricular (RV) walls produced by a release of serotonin (5-HT). A patient affected by primitive ileal tumour with 5-HT-secernent hepatic metastases inducing tricuspid insufficiency is showed. Transthoracic 2-D echocardiography showed tricuspid valve regurgitation and both right atrium, RV-walls plaques and RV dilation. Continue-wave Doppler showed a characteristic "dagger shaped" spectrum of tricuspid systolic flow. RV function was evaluated with 3-D transthoracic echocardiography. In particular, RV volumes, RV ejection fraction and
stroke
volume were defined by this technique. 2, 3-D echocardiography and Doppler method are useful techniques to show heart valves' derangements and RV function to non-invasively detect RV impairments in
carcinoid
heart disease.
...
PMID:Carcinoid Heart Disease: A Rare Cause of Right Ventricular Dysfunction Evaluation by Transthoracic 2D, Doppler and 3-D Echocardiography. 2186 Jul 26
Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leucoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is one of the most common heritable causes of
stroke
and dementia in adults. The gene involved in the pathogenesis of CADASIL is Notch3; in which mutations affect the number of cysteine residues in its extracellular domain, causing its accumulation in small arteries and arterioles of the affected individuals. Besides the usual neurological and vascular findings that have been well-documented in CADASIL patients, this paper additionally reports multiple neoplastic lesions that were observed in an autopsy case of CADASIL patient; that could be related to Notch3 mutation. The patient was a 62 years old male, presented with a past history of neurological manifestations, including gait disturbance and frequent convulsive attacks. He was diagnosed as CADASIL syndrome with Notch3 Arg133Cys mutation. He eventually developed hemiplegia and died of systemic convulsions. Autopsy examination revealed-besides the vascular and neurological lesions characteristic of CADASIL- multiple neoplastic lesions in the body;
carcinoid
tumorlet and diffuse idiopathic pulmonary neuro-endocrine cell hyperplasia (DIPNECH) in the lungs, renal cell carcinoma (RCC), prostatic adenocarcinoma (ADC) and adenomatoid tumor of the epididymis. This report describes a spectrum of neoplastic lesions that were found in a case of CADASIL patient that could be related to Notch3 gene mutations.
...
PMID:Neoplastic lesions in CADASIL syndrome: report of an autopsied Japanese case. 2626 65
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