Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (bone metastases)
6,382 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During the years 1960 to 1989, 145 patients underwent sleeve lobectomy or sleeve resection of a main bronchus. Follow-up was complete except for one patient, who was no longer available for follow-up 4 years after operation. Eleven patients (7.6%) had a second primary cancer in the lung; 10 of these patients (90.9%) were men. Mean age at sleeve operation was 61.2 +/- 11.6 years. Mean interval between sleeve operation and development of second primary cancer was 53.8 months (range, 6 to 197 months). All second primary cancers occurred on the contralateral side. In five cases there was squamous cell carcinoma, in two there was adenocarcinoma, in one there was adenosquamous carcinoma, in two there was small cell carcinoma, and in one patient no definite histologic type could be established. Five patients had different histologic type from the initial, resected primary tumor. Seven patients (64%) were operated on: five underwent lobectomy and two underwent segmentectomy. In one patient the tumor was judged to be unresectable. Chemotherapy was given to the two patients with small cell carcinoma and radiotherapy was given to one patient with bone metastases. Follow-up was complete for these 11 patients. Data were calculated from detection of second primary cancer. There was one postoperative death from myocardial infarction. Eight other patients died during follow-up: five died of recurrent tumor or metastases, two died of acute cardiac failure, and one died of a perforated ulcer. The 1- and 4-year actuarial survivals were 41% and 30%, respectively. For the patients operated on, 1- and 4-year survivals were 57% and 43%, respectively. There were no survivors at 5 years. Sleeve resection is a valuable method of preserving functional lung tissue. It offers a chance of subsequent resection in patients who have second primary cancer, with acceptable results.
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PMID:Second primary lung cancer after bronchial sleeve resection. Treatment and results in eleven patients. 143 29

The case histories of the 49 patients who died in a series of 165 patients admitted to the Medical Unit between 1958 and 1984 with polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) were reviewed. The causes of death of the 29 men and 20 women, mean age 51.44 +/- 7.4 years, were classified into 6 groups. Infection accounted for 26.5% (13/49) of deaths, the initial site of infection being pulmonary, complicated by septicaemia in 6 cases. Cardiovascular events were responsible for death in 24.4% (11/49): terminal cardiac failure (4 cases), myocardial infarction (1 case), ventricular tachycardia (1 case), stroke (1 case), pulmonary embolism (2 cases), fulminant hemoptysis (1 case). Gastrointestinal complications were the cause of death in 16.3% (8/49): ischemic necrosis (5 cases), acute pancreatitis (2 cases), oesophageal ulceration (1 case). Renal failure was observed in 10.2% (5/49), all occurring before 1972: acute renal failure (3 cases), chronic renal failure (2 cases). Cancer was the cause of death in 10.2% (5/49): primary bronchial carcinoma (2 cases), laryngeal carcinoma (1 case), carcinoma of the vulva (1 case), bone metastases (1 case). Finally, 14.2% (7/49) could not be classified in the preceding groups. Sudden death occurred in 3 patients, shock in 1 patient, multivisceral PAN in 2 patients and anaphylactic shock in 1 patient. Three of the 12 patients who had post-mortem studies had signs of progressive vasculitis. The results are compared with other reports in the literature and the pathogenic mechanisms are discussed. The infections and cardiovascular deaths occurred early or late and were not related to the state of the activity of the vasculitis. Immunosuppressive treatment seems to play an important role in their pathogenesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Causes of death in systemic vasculitis of polyarteritis nodosa. Analysis of a series of 165 patients]. 290 28

Among 2175 patients seen over the last three years in a non-specialized department of internal medicine with no intensive care unit, 100 had supranormal serum lactic dehydrogenase activities. These patients' case-reports have been analyzed. Nearly half the patients (47/100) had a malignant disease (cancer or hemopathy). Among the remaining patients, 19 had a hepatic disorder (alcohol hepatitis in 10, viral hepatitis in 8, and isoniazide hepatitis in 1), 7 had a heart disease (heart failure with hepatomegaly in 5, myocardial infarction in 2), and 27 had various other conditions (including hemolysis in 6 and polymyositis en 3). The value of serum LDH assay is obvious in situations other than acute conditions such as myocardial infarction of pulmonary embolism; these are better known and have not been studied here as their prevalence was low among the patients enlisted in our study. In comparison to other enzymes (alkaline phosphatase (AP), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), transaminases (GOT, GPT) that were also routinely assayed in our patients, abnormal serum LDH activities are much less common and their significance is quite different. An increase in serum and their significance is quite different. An increase in serum LDH activity indicates a serious condition, often with a fatal outcome. The "various other conditions" group includes patients with hemolysis, hepatitis and myositis; the other patients in this group either had severe infectious diseases or died suddenly in the first few days of their hospitalization before diagnosis had been established. Each etiologic group has been analyzed to asses the characteristics of patients with increased LDH activity according to each etiology. Analysis of coincident abnormalities of the other enzymes listed above shows marked differences between etiologic groups; diagnostic accuracy can thus be enhanced in certain conditions. Most patients with malignancies had poorly differentiated tumors, with metastases: 28 had an epithelial tumor, with hepatic and/or bone metastases in 23 cases, 5 had cancer of the liver, 10 had a malignant hemopathy (2 lymphomas, 5 myeloproliferative syndromes, 3 acute leukemias), and 4 had a sarcoma. Cancer of the lung is the most common malignancy (10 cases) and may be responsible for increased serum LDH activity even in patients without metastases. Serum LDH assay is of value for monitoring the course in patients with initially increased activities as it falls under effective therapy and rises during exacerbations.
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PMID:[Value and diagnostic significance of serum lactic dehydrogenase in internal medicine (author's transl)]. 628 24

A 65-year-old man with known bone metastases from prostate cancer and no cardiac history attended for a restaging bone scan (BS). Diffuse increased Tc-HDP activity in the heart was noted, new since a BS 3 months earlier. A restaging contrast-enhanced CT scan on the same day showed reduced myocardial perfusion in the anterior, apical, and septal walls. On direct questioning, he described an episode of severe exertional chest pain the day before. Myocardial infarction was confirmed and treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention. New cardiac uptake on BS, raising the possibility of myocardial infarction, is a red alert for clinicians.
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PMID:Myocardial uptake of 99mTc-HDP and reduced perfusion on CT in subacute myocardial infarction. 2421 44

Ramucirumab(RAM)plus nab-paclitaxel(nab-PTX)therapy is a regimen that is recommended for the second round of chemotherapy in recurrent, progressive gastric cancer. We report the first case of a thoracic aortic dissection developed during RAM plus nab-PTX therapy. A 59-year-old male who had undergone a proximal gastrectomy for esophagogastric junction cancer had a recurrence of cancer 6 years later(metastasis to the para-aortic lymph node and left adrenal gland, local recurrence, and multiple bone metastases). He was treated with RAM plus nab-PTX therapy for second-line chemotherapy. On day 9 of the third cycle, he experienced sudden, severe neck pain and visited the outpatient emergency department. Computed tomography detected a Stanford type-A thoracic aortic dissection. However, the patient suffered from a myocardial infarction before the operation, and died. This is the first report of an aortic dissection associated with RAM. Clinicians must be aware of this complication.
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PMID:[A Thoracic Aortic Dissection Case during Treatment with Ramucirumab plus Nab-Paclitaxel]. 3254 Nov 79