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Query: UMLS:C0149925 (
small cell lung cancer
)
6,491
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The bone marrow is a common site of metastases in patients with solid tumors. Metastatic bone marrow involvement is found much more frequently at autopsy than in routine staging procedures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic efficacy of bone marrow
MRI
in such patients, and especially in those with
small cell lung cancer
and female breast carcinoma.
MRI
is a fast and reliable method for the early detection of bone marrow metastases in patients with carcinoma. In many studies and according to our own experience, it is much more sensitive than radionuclide bone scan, iliac crest biopsy and plain film radiography. However, a clear clinical benefit of its use in the initial staging has so far been proven only for patients with
small cell lung cancer
. As a consequence,
MRI
should be applied for the staging of solid tumors only when clinical examination does not yield unambiguous results. Owing to its superiority to biopsy and bone scan, bone marrow
MRI
should become an integral part of the initial staging procedure in
small cell lung cancer
and wherever it is sufficiently available it can replace the conventional diagnostic procedures.
...
PMID:[Magnetic resonance tomography of the bone marrow for the detection of metastases of solid tumors]. 133 14
Small cell lung cancer
(
SCC
) has the most rapid growth rate of the four cell types and metastasizes early. Present imaging modalities for staging include chest x-ray, CT,
MRI
and bone scans. In this preliminary study, we assessed the clinical role of 99mTc-monoclonal antibody (MOAB) scintigraphy in five patients with histologically proven
SCC
. Each patient was infused with 20-30 mCi of 99mTc labeled Fab fragment of MOAB (NR-LU-10, NeoRx, Seattle, Wash.). Total body simultaneous anterior and posterior images were obtained 14-16 h post injection. SPECT images of the chest were obtained through a 360 degrees rotation of the gamma camera and recorded on a 62 x 64 x 16 matrix. Images (1.2 cm thick) were generated in transaxial, sagittal and coronal views. Fourteen of fifteen chest lesions detected by CT were confirmed by 99mTc MOAB scintigraphy. Scintigraphy detected one additional chest lesion not seen by CT. Scintigraphy failed to detect a brain lesion (2 cm), a chest lesion, and two adrenal lesions, all of which were seen by CT. In one patient with multiple (more than 10) lesions in the liver, both scintigraphy and CT detected all lesions. Three spine lesions seen on 99mTc MDP scan and positive for metastasis on
MRI
concentrated 99mTc MOAB, but two rib lesions seen on 99mTc MDP bone scan did not concentrate 99mTc MOAB. It is concluded from these preliminary results that the potential usefulness of 99mTc MOAB scintigraphy as a complementary imaging modality in the staging of
small cell lung cancer
should be investigated further.
...
PMID:Technetium-99m monoclonal antibody fragment (Fab) scintigraphy in the evaluation of small cell lung cancer: a preliminary report. 166 Apr 51
Six patients with
small cell lung cancer
developed a slowly progressive neurologic syndrome characterized by apathy, abulia, memory loss, gait ataxia, and corticospinal tract signs 26 to 50 months (mean, 35.2 months) after prophylactic cranial irradiation and systemic chemotherapy. In each case this was accompanied by CT and/or
MRI
evidence of changes in the periventricular white matter. These patients are long-term survivors (41 to 69 months) and do not have CNS metastases.
...
PMID:Delayed leukoencephalopathy in survivors with small cell lung cancer. 303 38
A 48-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of upper abdominal pain, and a cervical tumor, on Oct. 23, 1992. Chest X-ray, CT scan and
MRI
revealed a tumor (left-S10) and enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes. A pathological diagnosis of
small cell lung cancer
was made by transbronchial biopsy. Ultrasonography showed liver metastases. He received four courses of chemotherapy (Carboplatin, Ifosfamide, Etoposide). Three days after the completion of chemotherapy, his serum transaminase level was markedly increased, and he was disorientated on March 4, 1993. In spite of plasma exchange, the patient died due to hepatic failure on March 6, 1993. Fulminant hepatitis in a patient with lung cancer receiving chemotherapy is rarely reported.
...
PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer associated with fulminant hepatitis B]. 779 62
A 62-year-old male with
small cell lung cancer
(
SCLC
) associated with Cushing's syndrome and diabetes insipidus (DI) is reported. The patient was referred to our hospital for treatment of
SCLC
. A diagnosis of paraneoplastic Cushing's syndrome was made on the basis of an elevated serum ACTH (623.5 pg/ml) level, elevated excretion of urinary 17-OHCS (18.01 mg/day), obesity, hypertension, hyperglycemia, persistent hypokalemia, alkalosis, and no history of diabetes mellitus. He was also diagnosed as having DI based on polyuria and polydipsia, low specific gravity of the urine (1.007-1.010), low serum ADH (1.4 pg/ml) level, normal plasma osmolarity (29 mOsm/kg H2O), and the results of water deprivation test. DI and a left visual field defect was suggestive of metastasis to the pituitary region, but no lesion was detected by either CT scan or
MRI
scan. The patient failed to show a good response to intensive chemotherapy, and died of the tumor five months after commencing chemotherapy. Post-mortem examination revealed metastases to the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal region, lungs, liver, adrenal glands, bone, bone marrow, and hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes.
...
PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer associated with diabetes insipidus and Cushing's syndrome]. 839 May 89
Clinicopathological and immunohistochemical studies were performed in a patient with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis, myelitis, sensory neuropathy and cerebellar degeneration secondary to
small cell lung cancer
. A 67-year-old male smoker developed orthostatic dizziness 6 months prior to admission. Over the following months, his wife noticed that he became forgetful and confused. Over the next three weeks, he became unable to sit or stand unaided and admitted to our service. On admission, he was lethargic and disoriented in time and place. Neurological examination revealed marked limb weakness with distal dominant muscle atrophy. A chest radiograph demonstrated a mass in the right middle lobe and a bronchial biopsy revealed a small cell carcinoma. CT scan and
MRI
of the brain revealed abnormalities in the bilateral medial temporal lobes and putamen. He was treated with anti-cancer chemotherapy, but died of respiratory failure after 13 months illness. Postmortem examination showed a mass in the right middle lobe of the lung. No tumor metastases were noted in the nervous tissue. Microscopical examinations of the nervous system revealed neuronal loss, astrogliosis and perivascular and parenchymatous lymphocytic infiltration in the hippocampus, subiculum, amygdala, putamen, medulla oblongata, spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia. Loss of Purkinje cells was also seen in the cerebellum without lymphocytic infiltration. Immunohistochemical analysis of the patient's serum and CSF by the use of adult rat brain revealed immunoreactivity at the hippocampal pyramidal neurons CA3 and CA4. At the higher dilution, neuronal nuclei were specifically stained.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A clinicopathological study of a patient with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis, myelitis, sensory neuropathy and cerebellar degeneration, associated with a unique antineuronal antibody]. 839 16
The patient was a 48-year-old woman. In January 1995, she noted swelling in the left parotid gland, and saw an otorhinolaryngologist. Needle biopsy showed small cell carcinoma, and she was subsequently admitted to our hospital. Chest radiography revealed a tumor shadow in the hilus of the right lung. Bronchial biopsy revealed small cell carcinoma of the lung (T 4 N 3 M 1, stage IV). Chemotherapy, with a CDDP-VP-16 regimen, achieved no response. She later developed bitemporal hemianopsia and abducens nerve palsy. Brain
MRI
revealed metastasis in the pituitary gland. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy were efficacious for only a few months. She also developed pain and numbness in the left leg, attributable to intramedullary metastasis (L 1/2, L 4/5) shown on
MRI
. It is extremely rare for a metastasis to the parotid gland to be the initial clinical manifestation of a
small cell lung cancer
which later develops widespread metastases to the pituitary gland and lumbar spinal cord.
...
PMID:[Metastasis of small cell lung cancer to the parotid gland as the initial clinical manifestation, followed by metastases to the pituitary gland and lumber spinal cord]. 965 71
The incidence of elderly patients with
small cell lung cancer
is increasing in Japan. Because of the variation in their physical function and increasing co-morbid disease, elderly patients are usually excluded from clinical trials. Questionnaires were sent to 40 institutes of the "West Japan Thoracic Oncology Group", and answers from 33 (83%) institutes were obtained. Eighty-five percent of replies recognized the need of trials for limited disease (LD) and 70% for extensive disease (ED). We investigated the methods of staging procedures, and management of 351
small cell lung cancer
patients aged 70 years or older diagnosed from 1994 to 1996 in 28 institutes. There were 173 patients aged 70-74, 120 aged 75-80, and 58 aged 80 years or older. Staging procedures including chest CT, abdominal CT, abdominal CT or Echo. Brain CT or
MRI
and bone scinti scan were performed in 333 (95%) patients. One hundred fifty-nine of 178 patients with LD and 143 of 168 patients with ED received anticancer therapy. Although 48% of PS 0-1 patients received 4 courses or more of chemotherapy, among the patients with ED 24% of patients with PS 2 and 19% of PS 3 patients received adequate chemotherapy. The response rate was 79% for LD and 69% for ED. Many elderly patients received insufficient courses and/or doses of chemotherapy but achieved a good response. Median survival for patients with LD and ED was 12 and 6 months, respectively. To determine suitable regimens for elderly patients with lung cancer, more clinical trials are definitely needed.
...
PMID:[How should we treat elderly patients with small cell lung cancer?--information gathered by questionnaires and analysis of 351 patients aged 70 or over. West Japan Thoracic Oncology Group]. 1041 Jan 49
The management of single brain metastases has evolved substantially over the last decade. The advent of triple-dose contrast-enhanced
MRI
scans has improved the radiologists' capacity to resolve small tumors, and, thereby, has resulted in a declining percentage of brain metastases classified as single. Only 25% to 30% of brain metastases are single; single brain metastases in the absence of systemic metastases are termed solitary. Randomized trials suggest that patients not in imminent danger of herniation are best managed initially with dexamethasone 2 to 4 mg administered orally twice daily. The routine use of prophylactic anticonvulsants is discouraged. Patients with refractory progressive systemic tumor likely to prove fatal within 3 to 6 months should receive fractionated whole brain radiotherapy. Patients with highly radiosensitive primary tumors such as
small cell lung cancer
, lymphoma, and germinoma should also receive whole brain radiotherapy. Patients with inactive or controllable systemic cancer and good performance status benefit from the addition of local strategies like surgery or radiosurgery to whole brain radiotherapy. Although surgery and radiosurgery have not been compared in a randomized controlled trial, data suggest that results are similar. Consequently, for most metastases that fall within the size constraints of radiosurgery (3.5 cm or smaller in diameter), radiosurgery is preferred for its relatively noninvasive nature. Patients with larger or cystic tumors, with obstructive hydrocephalus, or neurologic instability despite corticosteroids are best treated with craniotomy. Fractionated whole brain radiation following surgical or radiosurgical management of single brain metastasis appears to decrease the risk of recurrent brain metastasis, although it has not been shown to improve survival. We recommend its use in most patients, although patients with tumors likely to be highly resistant to fractionated radiotherapy or at high risk of radiation neurotoxicity may reasonably defer its use.
...
PMID:Single Brain Metastasis. 1112 62
A 55-year-old man presenting with 4 weeks of progressive dysarthria, gait ataxia and vertigo was admitted to our hospital. Chest X-ray films revealed a mass shadow in the right upper lobe of the lung, and transbronchial brushing specimens showed small-cell carcinoma. Extensive examination revealed metastatic lesions in the mediastinal lymph nodes and liver, but brain
MRI
showed no findings suggestive of metastasis or atrophy. A diagnosis of PCD associated with
SCLC
was made, and the patient had a high titer of anti-P/Q-type VGCC antibody. He was treated by chemotherapy and radiation therapy, which resulted in a transient improvement in the PCD symptoms.
...
PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer with paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration and anti-voltage-gated calcium channel antibody]. 1129 85
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