Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (acute appendicitis)
3,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We evaluated Tc-99m-labeled anti-CD15 immunoglobulin M monoclonal antibody (LeuTech) for scintigraphic detection of acute appendicitis in patients with an equivocal clinical presentation. LeuTech avidly binds to circulating and sequestered human polymorphonuclear neutrophils in vivo eliminating the need for in vitro cell labeling and the risks of blood handling. We studied 99 patients to evaluate the safety and efficacy of LeuTech imaging. Serial dynamic and static planar images were acquired for up to 3 hours after the intravenous administration of 10 to 20 mCi of Tc-99m LeuTech. Scans were read as positive or negative for acute appendicitis or other intra-abdominal infection. The institutional diagnosis was established by surgery and histopathology of the appendix, results of other diagnostic studies, or 2-week clinical follow-up. Scans were positive for appendicitis in 39 of 40 patients with appendicitis at surgery (sensitivity 98%) and negative for appendicitis in 49 of 58 patients without appendicitis (specificity 84%). One was lost to follow-up. Accuracy, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were 90, 81, and 98 per cent respectively. In patients with appendicitis and positive scans more than 50 per cent of the images were positive at 4 minutes, and all were positive by 1 hour. Mean time of first positive image was 15 minutes. There were no serious adverse reactions. We conclude that LeuTech imaging is a highly sensitive test for detection of appendicitis in equivocal cases. There are advantages of this agent over the other currently used radiotracers in terms of convenience and time to diagnosis particularly the rapidity with which acute appendicitis will be seen on the images.
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PMID:Scintigraphic determination of equivocal appendicitis. 1099 24

Extra-nodal Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) represents 15% of all Hodgkin's lymphomas; the primary intestinal site accounts for 1% and with involvement of the ascending colon being rare. We present the case of a patient of 62 years of age diagnosed as having acute appendicitis. Anatomopathology on the excised appendectomy tissue indicated nodular lymphocytic predominant Hodgkin's lymphoma (NLPHL). The morphology indicated isolated L&H (lymphocytic or histiocytic) cells or in groups, surrounded by T lymphocytes, in an environment of germinal centres together with phenomena that would be interpreted as progressive transformation. Immunohistochemistry staining of the HL cells were positive for CD45, CD20, Bc16, EMA and MUM1 and negative for CD15 and CD30. No complementary treatment was administered. Following a literature search, the present case would appear to be the first of its kind.
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PMID:Primary Hodgkin's lymphoma of the caecum. 1679 Mar 99