Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0079731 (B-cell lymphoma)
16,671 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 33-year-old Japanese woman visited our hospital with progressive dyspnea. A chest roentgenogram and a chest computed tomogram revealed a mediastinal tumor and pericardial effusion. Ultrasound cardiography revealed the existence of cardiac tamponade. She was successfully treated with emergency pericardial drainage, thoracocentesis and chemotherapy. The histological diagnosis of diffuse large B cell lymphoma was established with the tumor specimen obtained by transcutaneous fine needle aspiration biopsy and through immunohistochemical analysis. This is a rare case of primary mediastinal diffuse large cell lymphoma with initial presentation of a symptom related to pericardial effusion.
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PMID:Primary mediastinal diffuse large cell lymphoma initially presented with pericardial infiltration. 128 7

Mediastinal B-cell malignant lymphoma of a 22-year-old female was successfully treated by combination chemotherapy including Adriamycin, Vincristine and Cyclophosphamide. She suffered from dyspnea and axillary tumor in September 1984. Roentgenological examination revealed a large anterior mediastinal tumor. Biopsy of the axillary tumor yielded a diagnosis of metastatic undifferentiated carcinoma from thymus by hematoxylin and eosin. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy including CDDP and ACNU resulted in a symptom-free period of only 2 months. Superior vena cava syndrome and massive pleural effusion recurred. Salvage chemotherapy including Adriamycin, Vincristine and Cyclophosphamide resulted in rapid therapeutic effect. Six courses of chemotherapy were administered, and she is alive and well 4 years after the first salvage chemotherapy. A definitive diagnosis of B-cell lymphoma was made after review of biopsy specimens using immunohistochemical procedures. To select adequate treatment for mediastinal malignant lymphoma, reliable diagnostic procedures including immunohistochemistry are needed. Intensive chemotherapy with appropriate drugs may obtain good response even in advanced cases, such as this.
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PMID:[A case report of mediastinal malignant lymphoma with long survival following combination chemotherapy using adriamycin, vincristine and cyclophosphamide]. 221 91

Mediastinal large-B-cell lymphoma with sclerosis is now considered to be a discrete subtype of lymphoma. It probably originates in the thymus, a T-cell organ. Early publications consider this lymphoma as an aggressive disorder with poor prognosis. We studied retrospectively ten consecutive patients with mediastinal B-cell lymphoma with sclerosis seen in the department of hematology. Nine were women. The median age at diagnosis was 38.3 years (16-60). Dyspnea (experienced by 7 patients), chest pain (5) and cough (10) were the most common clinical features at presentation. Superior vena cava syndrome occurred in three patients. Five had infiltration of the chest wall or of the pulmonary tissue. Four patients were in clinical stage I (all bulky > 10 cm), four in stage IIE, one was in stage IIE and one in stage IV (Ann Arbor classification). All patients were treated with intensive chemotherapy, mostly containing cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine or vindesine, bleomycin and prednisone, combined with etoposide or teniposide and methotrexate. Nine patients responded well to chemotherapy (tumor reduction > 75%). One patient progressed. Eight patients received involved field radiotherapy (36-40 Gy) after chemotherapy. The two other patients were treated with intensive chemotherapy (BEAC, BCNU, etoposide, cytarabine, cyclophosphamide), followed by autologous bone marrow transplantation. Two patients died: one patient received autologous bone marrow transplantation in partial remission and relapsed after 6 months; the other patient had progressive disease despite chemotherapy, surgery and radiotherapy. Mean follow-up is 54.6 months (15-118) with 8 patients still remaining in complete remission. In patients with mediastinal B-cell lymphoma, tumour localisation is often limited to the thorax.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mediastinal B-cell lymphoma with sclerosis: clinical features and treatment results in 10 patients. 763 28

A 67 year old woman with rheumatoid arthritis was admitted to hospital in acute renal failure. Her clinical features included increasing dyspnoea and oedema, and a computed tomogram of the abdomen showed a large mass in the retroperitoneum. Twenty six days later, she died, and a post mortem examination was carried out. The histological changes of the mass indicated B cell lymphoma of diffuse large cell type, with a reactive proliferation of erythrophagocytosing histiocytes. Immunocytochemical studies showed that the histiocytes were positive for CD-68 and lysozyme, but negative for S-100 protein. Such neoplastic B cell proliferation accompanied by activation of benign looking histiocytes with erythrophagocytosis is very rare.
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PMID:Rheumatoid arthritis and B cell lymphoma with pathological changes of reactive histiocytosis. 825

We present a case of primary cardiac lymphoma in a patient with dyspnea and hypoxemia. Transesophageal echocardiography reveals a large right atrial mass and an atrial septal aneurysm with right-to-left shunting through a patent foramen ovale. The patient underwent resection and atrial reconstruction. Pathology was a B cell lymphoma with diffuse large cell histology. There was no evidence of extracardiac involvement, and the patient is well 3 months postoperatively with a normal transthoracic echocardiogram.
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PMID:Primary cardiac lymphoma: echocardiographic characterization and successful resection. 861 70

During a 9-year-period, 50 cases of primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) of the thyroid gland were reported to a population-based lymphoma registry covering western Denmark giving an incidence of 2.06 x 10(-6) cases per year. The male:female ratio was 1:4, and the mean age was 72.8 years for women and 62.8 years for men. On histomorphological reclassification 83% of the cases showed a high grade and 17% a low grade morphology, 98% had a B-phenotype and 2% a T-phenotype. In at least 33 of the cases, primary NHL of the thyroid gland was preceded by Hashimoto's thyroiditis and at least 25 of the patients had a high grade NHL which was transformed from Hashimoto's thyroiditis through a low grade B-cell lymphoma of MALT type. The most frequent presenting symptoms were goitre (100%), hoarseness (57%), stridor/dyspnoea (55%) and dysphagia (45%); thirty-six percent of the patients were hypothyroid at the time of diagnosis. Seventy-six percent of the patients had localized disease (stages 1-2) and 24% had disseminated lymphoma (stages 3-4). Five year survival was 34.5% and 5 year cause-specific survival 46.2%. The following factors were associated with a poor prognosis: stage 3-4 disease, elevated S-urate, presence of hoarseness and age > 66 years. Morphological subtype did not correlate significantly with survival.
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PMID:Primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the thyroid gland: a population based study. 883 17

A 56-year-old man was admitted complaining of throat discomfort and dyspnea. He was given a diagnosis of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma on the basis of findings from tumor biopsy specimens of his left pharynx. MRI tomograms and ultrasonic cardiograms revealed a right atrial tumor causing tricuspid stenosis. Although chemotherapy rendered the cardiac tumor indistinct on MRI and UCG images, gallium-67 scintigraphy still demonstrated abnormal cardiac uptake. After 6 courses of CHOP therapy, sick sinus syndrome with syncope suddenly developed in the patient. A cardiac pacemaker was immediately implanted, and radiotherapy was started. The patient's sinus rhythm returned to normal shortly afterward, and the gallium-67 uptake eventually disappeared. In this case gallium-67 scintigraphy was the only diagnostic procedure capable of detecting evidence of residual disease.
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PMID:[Sick sinus syndrome after chemotherapy for malignant lymphoma with right atrial tumor at initial presentation]. 1002 53

We report on a primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma with aberrant expression of beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-hCG). The patient, a 33-year-old man, had cough, dyspnea, fever, superior vena cava syndrome, and a mediastinal bulky tumor. A biopsy showed that the latter was characterized by large cells, sclerosis, and compartmentalization. The neoplastic elements expressed CD45, CD20, CD79a and, partially, CD30, whereas they were negative for CD3, epithelial membrane antigen and cytokeratins. Surprisingly, they displayed a clear-cut positivity for beta-hCG. The remaining oncofetal markers applied (PLAP and alpha1-fetoprotein) were negative. Electron microscopy demonstrated the presence of numerous nuclear pockets and the lack of intercellular junctions. DNA analysis by polymerase chain reaction showed clonal rearrangement of Ig heavy-chain genes. The patient responded promptly to the administration of MACOP-B. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first example of B-cell lymphoma showing positivity for beta-hCG; a similar aberrant expression was previously observed only in three Japanese patients with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I+ adult T-cell lymphoma/leukemia. Because primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma has in the past been frequently confused with germ cell tumors, pathologists should be aware of possible beta-hCG expression by lymphomatous cells to avoid the risk of misdiagnosis.
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PMID:Beta-HCG aberrant expression in primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma. 1036 55

We present here a case of B-cell-type mediastinal malignant lymphoma during pregnancy complicated by placental involvement. In this case, some nodular high-echo patterns were recognized in the placenta by ultrasonography. A cesarean section and resection of the mediastinal tumor were performed at 33 weeks and 6 days of gestation due to the deterioration of the dyspnea. A female infant weighing 1,868 g was delivered and she is now a healthy 2-year-old. The mother, however, died of the disease 1 month after surgery, due to progression of the tumor. The placenta showed numerous white firm nodules varying from 3 mm to 3 cm in diameter. The pathologic findings of both the mediastinal tumor and the placenta indicated primary mediastinal (thymic) B-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:B-cell-type malignant lymphoma with placental involvement. 1076 30

A 76-year-old man was found to have esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and had been treated with radiational therapy and chemotherapy. Five years later, he was readmitted with dyspnea and marked edema of his extremities and face. An echocardiographic examination revealed a mass lesion in the pericardium with pericardial effusion behind the left ventricular posterior wall, which was near the site of the original esophageal cancer. Coronary arteriography revealed a feeder artery to the mass from the left circumflex branch. No findings indicated a recurrence of the esophageal cancer; cytologic studies showed malignant lymphoma cells of B-cell origin. A second primary cancer of some organs including blood cells might be induced by the carcinogenic effects of ionizing radiation or chemotherapeutic agents. This is the first case of second primary cardiac B-cell lymphoma after combination therapy.
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PMID:Second primary cardiac B-cell lymphoma after radiation therapy and chemotherapy--a case report. 1151 97


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