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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (bone metastases)
6,382 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bony metastases in association with a lesion in the lung are usually regarded as secondary to bronchial carcinoma. This is generally true when the metastases are osteolytic. However, in the presence of a solitary lung lesion with osteoblastic metastases, the diagnosis of bronchial carcinoid should be considered. The following case illustrates this point.
Thorax 1977 Aug
PMID:Bronchial carcinoid with osteoblastic metastases. 92 95

The exclusion of bone metastases is important in the initial staging of non-small cell lung cancer, though there is debate about whether bone scans should be performed routinely or restricted to patients who present with clinical or laboratory indicators suggesting skeletal metastases. In a prospective study of 110 consecutive patients referred for initial staging of non-small cell lung cancer, we assessed the sensitivity of a group of clinical indicators (chest pain, skeletal pain, bone tenderness on physical examination, serum alkaline phosphatase, and serum calcium) for the presence of skeletal metastases as determined by bone scanning. The final staging result was validated with follow up data over at least three years. At the initial staging 37 of 110 bone scans (34%) showed areas of increased uptake, of which only nine were confirmed to be metastases (by tomography, computed tomography, or biopsy). Half the patients (55) had at least one clinical indicator suggesting skeletal metastases, including all patients with proved skeletal metastases. Thus the sensitivity of these clinical indicators was 100% and the specificity 54%. Within one year three of 27 patients with non-confirmed positive bone scans had skeletal metastases, one of which was in the area that had shown increased uptake initially. All these patients had clinical indicators for skeletal metastases and all had inoperable advanced tumours. Four of 69 patients with an initially negative bone scan developed skeletal metastases within one year. It is concluded that in non-small cell lung cancer bone scanning can be restricted to patients with clinical indicators for skeletal metastases. This approach reduces the number of bone scans and consecutive investigations without loss of sensitivity in the detection of skeletal metastases.
Thorax 1991 Jul
PMID:Initial staging of non-small cell lung cancer: value of routine radioisotope bone scanning. 165 64

Pain is a common problem for patients undergoing radiation therapy, exacerbated by inconsistent pain documentation. Free-form templates, pain score prompts, and forcing functions are a hierarchy of constraint systems that can be applied to data entry. This study assessed the impact of incorporating these models into electronic health records on pain documentation rates during 450 on-treatment visits and pain severity of 258 patients with bone metastases and breast and thoracic cancer during radiation therapy. Pain documentation is associated with more robust constraint systems: free form (0.11, 95% CI [0.07, 0.18]), pain score prompts (0.87, 95% CI [0.81, 0.92]), and forcing functions (0.97, 95% CI [0.93, 0.99]). Forcing functions also were associated with improved pain control over the course of radiation treatment for bone metastases compared with pain score prompts (P = .026, nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis). Use of forcing functions correlates with increased pain documentation rates, which contributes to improved pain management.
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PMID:Application of Forcing Functions to Electronic Health Records Is Associated With Improved Pain Control for Patients Undergoing Radiation Therapy for Bone Metastases. 3232 26