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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0149520 (
acute cholecystitis
)
2,784
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We investigated whether carbohydrate antigens on biliary glycoproteins and
carcinoembryonic antigen
(
CEA
) are related to hepatolithiasis.
CEA
, ABO, and Lewis blood group-related antigens, as well as sialyl-Tn antigen in hepatic bile, were analyzed by Western blotting in samples from 12 patients with hepatolithiasis and 37 with other biliary diseases (choledocholithiasis, 13; cholecystolithiasis, 5;
acute cholecystitis
, 2; cholangiocarcinoma, 5; common bile duct carcinoma, 4; pancreatic carcinoma, 6; and metastatic carcinoma of liver, 2).
CEA
was positive on mucinous glycoprotein in six patients (50%) with hepatolithiasis and one case (17%) with pancreatic carcinoma.
CEA
was also positive on a glycoprotein of approximately 200 kd in eight patients (67%) with hepatolithiasis and two (33%) with pancreatic carcinoma. Lewis X was detected on the mucinous glycoprotein in almost all samples, as well as on glycoproteins of approximately 180 kd in all hepatolithiasis samples and approximately half of those from patients with other diseases. Sialyl-Tn antigen was detected on mucinous glycoprotein in four (80%) with cholangiocarcinoma, two (50%) with common bile duct carcinoma, and all pancreatic carcinoma samples. Mucinous glycoprotein and glycoproteins containing
CEA
and Lewis X antigens are enriched in hepatic bile of hepatolithiasis, and they may be closely related to the formation of intrahepatic calculi. Sialyl-Tn antigen in biliary mucinous glycoprotein will be a good marker of biliary and pancreatic carcinoma, and probably for cholangiocarcinoma complicated with hepatolithiasis.
...
PMID:Carcinoembryonic antigen and blood group-related carbohydrate antigens in glycoproteins in human bile in hepatolithiasis. Japanese Study Group of Hepatolithiasis. 859 50
Acute cholecystitis
associated with gallbladder carcinoma is very rare in young patients (younger than 30 years of age). Moreover, a definitive preoperative diagnosis is difficult. A 26-year-old man was referred to our hospital with a 5-day history of right upper quadrant pain. Computed tomography and ultrasonography demonstrated an enlarged gallbladder with a diffuse thick wall and a 2-cm gallstone obstructing the cystic duct. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography showed no evidence of an anomalous pancreaticobiliary junction. The patient showed an elevation in the white blood cell count, serum C-reactive protein, and alkaline phosphate; however, total bilirubin, alanine aminotransferase, and tumor markers including
carcinoembryonic antigen
and carbohydrate antigen 19-9 were all within the normal ranges. The preoperative diagnosis of gallstone-induced
acute cholecystitis
was made and an open cholecystectomy was thus performed 2 days after admission. The macroscopic findings showed a necrotic enlarged gallbladder with a thick wall and a gallstone, but no intraluminal nodular lesion. Histologic examinations revealed well-differentiated focal adenocarcinoma in the gallbladder mucosa, but no venous, lymphatic, or perineural invasion. The postoperative course has been uneventful with no recurrence 18 months postoperatively.
...
PMID:Latent gallbladder carcinoma in a young adult patient with acute cholecystitis: report of a case. 1764 22
A 58-year-old woman presented to a tertiary care centre with signs and symptoms of
acute cholecystitis
, cholelithiasis and diagnoses of a high-grade neuroendocrine tumour of the gallbladder primarily with peritoneal and liver metastases. She had a liver abscess secondary to Salmonella and Enterococcus fecalis that was drained and treated with appropriate antibiotics. Interestingly, the serum chromogranin A levels were within normal limits, but
carcinoembryonic antigen
was elevated, which helped evaluate responses and pick progression. She was treated with 10 cycles of palliative chemotherapy when malignancy associated complications started to recur, that is, cholangitis, worsening pain, cachexia, intestinal obstruction, etc leading to chemotherapy delays. Her disease progressed during these times with rapid deterioration of performance status. She died of septic complications postlaparotomy for intestinal obstruction. Her progression-free survival remained for 8 months with subjective and objective improvements, and her overall survival remained at 13 months. We describe the course of her illness and give a brief review of the literature.
...
PMID:Malignant neuroendocrine tumour of the gallbladder with elevated carcinoembryonic antigen: case report and literature review. 2366 52