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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (
bone metastases
)
6,382
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Initial staging of non-small cell lung cancer: value of routine radioisotope bone scanning. 165 64
A 64-year-old man complaining of anterior
chest pain
, weight loss, and neck tumors was found to have advanced gastric cancer with pleuritis carcinomatosa and multiple lymph node and
bone metastases
. The patient was treated with combination chemotherapy consisting of mitomycin C (MMC), tegafur (UFT), and lentinan, and then with MMC and 5-fluorouracil (5FU) instillation into the pleural spaces after pleural drainage. With these treatments, the primary tumors and cancerous ulcers of the stomach improved markedly, and the lymph node enlargement and pleural effusion disappeared completely. Afterwards pericardiac metastasis complicated by cardiac tamponade occurred, but repeated pericardiocentesis and administration of MMC into the pericardiac cavity effectively eliminated the effusion. These treatments appeared potentially useful for advanced gastric cancer with generalized metastases including pericardiac involvement. However, the patient died of cardiac tamponade with massive pericardiac bleeding, probably due to the repeated pericardiocentesis and/or the administration of anticancer drugs.
...
PMID:Pericardiac metastasis from advanced gastric cancer. 755 Aug 63
A case of primary and malignant melanoma of the esophagus was reported. A 64-year-old male complaining of discomfort of anterior
chest pain
was admitted to our hospital for operation. Findings of upper G-1 X-ray and endoscopic examination revealed suspiciously malignant melanoma. Subtotal thoracic esophagectomy with R III dissection was performed. Operative findings included A0 N2 Pl0 M0 Stage III. Macroscopically it showed black-grayish colored polypoid tumors, 7 cm in size. The typical finding of junctional activity adjacent to the tumor mass and melanocytes were microscopically found. The patient received postoperative systemic chemotherapy, but was died of multiple liver and
bone metastases
125 days after surgery. Malignant melanoma of the esophagus has extremely poor prognosis and none of effective therapies has been reported.
...
PMID:[A case of primary malignant melanoma of the esophagus]. 913 41
Approximately one half of prescribed radiotherapy is given for palliation of symptoms due to incurable cancer. Distressing symptoms including pain, bleeding, and obstruction can often be relieved with minimal toxic effects. Painful osseous metastasis is common in oncologic practice. Ninety percent of patients with symptomatic
bone metastases
obtain some pain relief with a lowdose, brief course of palliative radiotherapy. One half of the responding patients may experience complete pain relief. A single dose of 800 cGy in the setting of painful bone metastasis may provide pain control comparable to more protracted treatment at a higher dose of radiation. Patients with lytic disease in weight-bearing bones, particularly in the presence of cortical destruction, should be considered for prophylactic surgical stabilization of their condition. Routinely a brief, fractionated course of radiotherapy is given postoperatively. Pain due to multiple
bone metastases
uncontrolled by analgesics can be managed with single doses of halfbody irradiation. Doses of 600 cGy delivered to the upper half-body (above the umbilicus) and 800 cGy to the lower half-body (from the umbilicus to the middle of the femur) will provide some pain relief in 73% of patients. Half-body techniques have been investigated as prophylactic treatment, as a complement to local-field irradiation, and as fractionated rather than singledose therapy. Although intravenous administration of strontium 89 has been associated with myelosuppression, this treatment has been shown (a) to relieve pain due to bone metastasis and (b) to delay development of new painful sites. Recent data from phase III trials demonstrated that bisphosphonates have a role in reducing skeletal morbidity due to bone metastasis. Bone pain was reduced, and the incidence of pathologic fracture and the need for future radiotherapy was decreased. Radiotherapy relieves clinical symptoms in 70% to 90% of patients with brain metastases. Brief treatment schedules (e.g., 2000 cGy in five fractions over 1 week) are as effective as more prolonged therapy. Patients with solitary brain metastasis and no extracranial disease or controlled extracranial disease should be considered for surgical resection, because phase III data indicate enhanced survival with such an approach. Whole-brain radiotherapy is routinely administered postoperatively. A phase III study is examining the impact of accelerated fractionated doses of radiotherapy (two treatments per day) on survival of patients with brain metastases. Stereotaxic radiosurgical treatment is becoming increasingly available and permits delivery of radiation to metastatic intracranial tumor with minimal exposure of normal surrounding brain This treatment is most commonly used at the time of a solitary recurrence of disease in patients who previously received whole-brain radiotherapy. A role for this modality in newly diagnosed brain metastases remains to be defined. Chest symptoms are common in patients with locally advanced lung cancer and are effectively palliated with one 1000 cGy or two 850 cGy one fraction doses of radiation to the thoracic inlet and mediastinum.
Chest pain
and hemoptysis are more effectively palliated than cough and dyspnea. In patients with stage III cancer there is no compelling evidence that radiotherapy confers a survival advantage, and it may be reasonable to administer thoracic radiotherapy only when the patient has significant symptoms and the goal is to achieve control of these symptoms. Approximately 75% of the cases of superior vena cava syndrome are due to lung cancer, and small-cell lung cancer is the most common histologic type. A histologic diagnosis should be obtained before treatment is started, because detection of lymphoma or small-cell carcinoma would necessitate systemic therapy. Eighty percent of the patients with vena cava syndrome due to malignant disease achieve symptom relief with a brief, fractionated, palliative course of rad
...
PMID:Radiotherapy for palliation of symptoms in incurable cancer. 920 88
The authors report the case of a 28-year-old woman referred to their department by a respiratory medicine department with an inferior mediastinal tumour arising from the right atrium, presenting in the form of dysponea, dry cough and
chest pain
associated with a general syndrome composed of fever, weight loss and physical asthenia. Physical examination revealed a superior vena cava syndrome, the electrocardiogram showed diffuse repolarization disorders and the chest x-ray showed an opacity of the anterior and inferior mediastinum. The diagnosis of tumour of the right atrium was based on echocardiography and thoracic CT scan. Subtotal surgical resection under cardiopulmonary bypass allowed examination of the histological type of the tumour. After routine chemotherapy, despite negative secondary staging and a favourable immediate course, the patient died 11 months after the operation in a context of local recurrence and hepatic and
bone metastases
.
...
PMID:[Angiosarcoma of the right atrium. Presentation of a surgically treated case and comparison with data of the literature]. 958 34
The patient was a 57-year-old female with the main complaint of left
chest pain
and gait disturbance. Multiple
bone metastases
were observed in the vertebral and pelvic bone. Pathological pressure fracture, stegnosis of the spinal canal and edematous changes in the spinal nerves, especially in the 4th and 5th thoracic vertebrae, were observed. The clinical pathological status was T4cN1M1b, OSS Stage IV. After 4 cycles of weekly doxorubicin (DXR) (20 mg/body)/docetaxel (TXT) (40 mg/body) therapy (day 1, day 8, day 15, 1-week recovery period) were given to the patient, CA15-3 had decreased from 1,200 U/ml to 28 U/ml. The histopathological effect was judged to be Grade 2. Thereafter, ICTP was increased to 12.7 ng/ml and after 2 cycles of the weekly DXR/TXT therapy (day 1, day 8, 2-week recovery period) had been added, the patient was able to walk. MRI of the thoracic vertebrae showed that the foci of bone metastasis had improved 9 months after the treatment with chemotherapeutics, and good PS was maintained. No serious adverse reactions were observed with the weekly DXR/TXT therapy. Therefore, weekly DXR/TXT therapy is considered to be effective in treating patients with bone metastasis.
...
PMID:[Patient with bone metastasis of breast cancer who were improved by weekly DXR/TXT therapy]. 1235 48
Inspite the new informations about the physiology and biochemistry of pain, it remains true that pain is only partially understood. Cancer pain is often experienced as several different types of pain, with combined somatic and neuropathic types the most frequently. If the acute cancer pain does not subside with initial therapy, patients experience pain of more constant nature, the characteristics of wich vary with the cause and the involved sites. Chronic pain related to cancer can be considered as tumor-induced pain, chemotherapy-induced pain, and radiation therapy-induced pain. Certain pain mechanisms are present in cancer patients. These include inflammation due to infection, such as local sepsis or the pain of herpes zoster, and pain due to the obstruction or occlusion of a hollow organ, such as that caused by large bowel in cancer of colon. Pain also is commonly due to destruction of tissue, such as is often seen with bony metastases.
Bony metastases
also produce pain because of periostal irritation, medullary pressure, and fractures. Pain may be produced by the growth of tumor in a closed area richly supplied with pain receptors (nociceptors). Examples are tumors growing within the capsule of an organ such as the pancreas.
Chest pain
occurring after tumor of the lung or the mediastinum due to invasion of the pleura. Certain tumors produce characteristic types of pain. For example, back pain is seen with multiple myeloma, and severe shoulder pain and arm pain is seen with Pancoast tumors.
...
PMID:Cancer pain (classification and pain syndromes). 1601 3
Among adrenal incidentalomas, pheochromocytomas are rare. Malignant pheochromocytoma is even less common, and it typically presents with classic hormonal symptoms, such as palpitations, labile blood pressures, and headaches.
Bony metastasis
usually occurs late in disease, but we report an unusual case of incapacitating bony pain as the initial presentation of malignant pheochromocytoma. Our patient is a 70-year-old woman with neurofibromatosis type 1 and a history of primary hyperparathyroidism, who tested negative for the ret mutation. She came to medical attention with
chest pain
and palpitations and was incidentally found to have an adrenal mass. Serum and urine testing was consistent with pheochromocytoma. Her blood pressure was easily controlled as she awaited elective adrenalectomy; however, she quickly developed severe, diffuse bony pain. She represented with hypercalcemia, spontaneous fractures, and incapacitating pain that required such high doses of pain medications that she had to be intubated. Further imaging and bone marrow biopsy confirmed metastatic neuroendocrine tumor. She received one round of chemotherapy with no change in her bony pain, which was her primary complaint. Unfortunately, her treatment options were limited by the heavy sedation required for comfort, and in the end, it was her bony pain rather than hormonal symptoms that made her disease untreatable.
...
PMID:Malignant pheochromocytoma presenting as incapacitating bony pain. 2267 44
The patient is a 69-year-old male. His chief complaint was
chest pain
. Because imaging studies suggested pleural mesothelioma associated with multiple
bone metastases
, right pleural tumor resection was performed. Pathological diagnosis was metastatic pleural tumor, and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) was suspected as its origin. Dynamic computed tomography showed a small tumor in the right kidney. The tumor was 15 mm in diameter and consistent with RCC. Laparoscopic radical nephrectomy was performed for the right kidney. Pathological diagnosis was RCC, clear cell carcinoma with sarcomatoid component, T1aN0M1, stage IV. Sorafenib therapy was started 46 days after the operation as a systemic therapy, and stable disease has been maintained. Generally, small RCC is assumed to have a good prognosis. However, a small percentage of patients with small RCC have distant metastasis at the time of diagnosis, and the prognosis is reported to be poor. We report this case, and a review of the literature.
...
PMID:[Small renal cell carcinoma presented with pleural metastasis and multiple bone metastasis ; a case report]. 2207 10
In this study, we report 2 pediatric cases of nuclear protein of the testis (NUT) midline carcinoma (NMC) suggestive of pulmonary origin: case 1 was a 14-year-old Japanese boy and case 2 was a 7-year-old Japanese girl. Initial symptoms of both cases were prolonged cough and
chest pain
, and the case 2 patient also complained of lumbago and lumbar mass due to
bone metastases
. Imaging studies revealed that pulmonary tumors from both patients were located at the hilar region of the lower lobe. Biopsies of the tumors showed undifferentiated carcinoma in case 1 and combined undifferentiated and squamous cell carcinoma in case 2. Despite intensive treatment with chemotherapy and radiation, progression of neither tumor was controlled, and both patients died of the tumors at 1 year (case 1) and 4 months (case 2) after onset of disease. Both tumors were diffusely positive for p63 and NUT expression and were partially positive for various cytokeratins. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis and subsequent direct sequencing revealed that the bromodomain-containing protein 4-NUT chimeric gene was present in tumor tissue of both patients, leading to a diagnosis of NMC. The tumor cells of case 1 were also positive for thyroid transcription factor-1 expression, but those of case 2 were negative. Histologic examination of the surgically removed lung tumor of case 1 indicated that the origin of the tumor was basal cells of the bronchiolar epithelia.
...
PMID:NUT midline carcinoma: report of 2 cases suggestive of pulmonary origin. 2230
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