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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (lung cancer)
71,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fibreoptic bronchoscopy (FOB) helps in visualisation of the endobronchial tree. Fibreoptic bronchoscopies were done in 429 cases between January 1999 and January 2000 [322 men (75.1%) and 107 women (24.9%)]. Patients were between 12 and 89 years of age (mean+/- SD = 49 +/- 15.1 years). Of which, 196 (45.7%) had lung cancer and 233 (54.4%) had non-malignant disease [Tuberculosis (TB) 26, miliary TB 16, non-resolving pneumonia 29, atypical pneumonia 10, bronchiectasis 11, aspergillosis 12, sarcoidosis 17, interstitial lung disease (ILD) 20, haemoptysis with normal chest x-ray 13 and miscellaneous 79]. In this series of 429 patients a significant number of patients (n = 127) presented with fever (38 malignant and 89 non-malignant disease, p < 0.0001), 137 had haemoptysis (74 malignant and 63 non-malignant disease, p < 0.01), 89 had chest pain (61 malignant and 28 non-malignant disease, p < 0.0001) and 29 patients presented with complaint of anorexia (21 malignant and 8 non-malignant disease, p < 0.003). High prevalence of lung lesions in the right upper lobe [10.4% (43 of 411)] and left main bronchus [12% (49 of 411)] was observed. Left upper lobe showed 8.7% (36 patients) lesions and right middle lobe showed 5.5% (23 patients) lesions. In 143 (34.8%) patients, FOB findings were normal. Out of 407 patients, FOB was suggestive of necrotic/nodular growth in 159 patients (39.1%), infiltrative growth in 8 patients (1.9%), and extrinsic compression was found in 39 patients (9.6%). In 143 patients (35.2%) no endobronchial growth was seen. Bronchial biopsy (BB) was performed in 162 (37.8%) patients, transbronchial lung biopsy in 56 patients (13.1%), bronchial washing for cytology in 350 patients (81.5%), bronchial washing for AFB in 302 patients (70.3%), bronchial washing for culture in 67 patients (15.6%), bronchial washing for fungus in 64 patients (14.9%) and Pneumocystis carinii infection was looked for in 6 patients (1.4%). Postbronchoscopy complications were recorded as follows: Early termination of FOB due to decreased O2 saturation in 10 cases (2.4%), postbiopsy bleeding in 5 cases (1.2%), post FOB fever in 5 cases (1.2%), chest pain in 7 patients (1.7%) and pneumothorax occurred in 2 patients (0.5%). FOB performed in outpatient setting is a useful and safe modality. Most patients in whom FOB was done in the present setup had suspected lung cancer. No major complications were encountered.
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PMID:Bronchoscopy in adults at a tertiary care centre: indications and complications. 1547 75

The purpose of this study was to establish the technique of multiplanar reconstruction (MPR) with multidetector-row (MDR) computed tomography (CT) guided needle biopsy for the diagnosis to access very difficult lesions. The CT guided percutaneous biopsy are well-established methods to obtain cytological and histological material such as the peripheral tumors in lung cancer. Occasionally, the conventional CT cannot permit planning a trajectory to avoid passage through bones, avoidance of bullae, fissures or vessels. In addition, some lesions are situated in less favorable locations such as those in the costophrenic recess or close to the mediastinum. Rarely can we diagnose them. MPR with MDR-CT has recently become widely available with applications for thoracic lesions. MPR images have been used to evaluate the location of small peripheral lung nodules to the relation of bullaes, vessels, and costophrenic recess. To diagnose these lesions, the usefulness of MPR were evaluated for an planning of an oblique approach of CT guided needle biopsy. MPR images were reconstructed as a line from the needle entry point to the target lesion. The first oblique image applied as the direction of posterior-anterior and cranio-caudal axis, and the second oblique image applied as the direction of posterior-anterior and left-right. Eleven out of 151 patients were required MPR technique to allow possible access to target, because of avoidance of bone and fissures in the needle pass or located in the costophrenic recess, between April 2001 and December 2002. The 5/11 patients were at the upper site (segment 1, 2 and 6) behind the scapula and ribs, 3/11 patients were at the lower lobe (segment 10) in the costophrenic recess, and 3/11 were middle lobe or segment 3 covered by the ribs and fissures. All the lesions except one were histologically diagnosed. Five patients were adenocarcinoma, and the other five patients were benign tumors. Pneumothorax occurred in one patient before we obtained the specimens. MPR guided needle biopsy with oblique approach was thought to be useful for diagnosis of very difficult thoracic lesions and would obviate an unnecessary surgical thoracoscopy.
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PMID:Oblique approach of computed tomography guided needle biopsy using multiplanar reconstruction image by multidetector-row CT in lung cancer. 1548 81

A 41-year-old man with productive cough was admitted to our hospital. His chest roentgenogram showed multiple small nodules in the bilateral lung fields. The nodules were revealed as intrapulmonary metastases of the adenocarcinoma of the lung. Systemic chemotherapy with paclitaxel and carboplatin was not effective, and continuous oral gefitinib therapy was initiated. Twenty-one days later, spontaneous pneumothorax was found in the left lung, and four days after that, in the right lung as well. The extent of the pneumothorax was slight; therefore, he recovered without drainage within several days. Spontaneous pneumothorax, especially bilateral pneumothorax, is a rare complication of chemotherapy for lung cancer.
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PMID:Simultaneous bilateral spontaneous pneumothorax observed during the administration of gefitinib for lung adenocarcinoma with multiple lung metastases. 1615 88

A 79-year-old woman who had a past history of chronic renal failure 10 years earlier, tongue cancer (T2N2M0) 3 years earlier, and tuberculosis of the cervical lymph nodes 6 months earlier was suddenly admitted with the complaint of right chest pain on April 6, 2004. Right pneumothorax and mild pleural effusion were observed on a chest radiograph. There was no improvement in the patients collapsed lung despite the insertion of a chest drainage tube into the pleural cavity. Three thin-walled cavitary lesions were noted in the right lobe of segment 1 on computed tomography, and the cause of her pneumothorax was thought to be air leakage from the largest cavitary lesion adjacent to the visceral pleura. Partial resection of the right lung by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) was performed at the Department of Thoracic Surgery. Subsequently, it was determined that metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the lung, corresponding to her tongue cancer, had invaded the visceral pleura adjacent to the largest cavitary lesion. Simultaneously, an epitheloid granuloma with caseating necrosis was observed adjacent to a partially thickened portion of this cavitary lesion. The epitheloid granuloma was found to be acid-fast bacilli-positive and a diagnosis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis pulmonary tuberculosis was made. We report a rare case of the coexistence of metastatic lung cancer originating from tongue cancer and active pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosed in the same large cavitary lesion.
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PMID:Coexistence of metastatic lung cancer and pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosed in the same cavity. 1624 67

A bronchopleural fistula (BPF) is a communication between the pleural space and the bronchial tree. Although rare, BPFs represent a challenging management problem and are associated with high morbidity and mortality. By far, the postoperative complication of pulmonary resection is the most common cause, followed by lung necrosis complicating infection, persistent spontaneous pneumothorax, chemotherapy or radiotherapy (for lung cancer), and tuberculosis. The treatment of BPF includes various surgical and medical procedures, and of particular interest is the use of bronchoscopy and different glues, coils, and sealants. Localization of the fistula and size may indicate potential benefits of surgical vs endoscopic procedures. In high-risk surgical patients, endoscopic procedures may serve as a temporary bridge until the patient's clinical status is improved, while in other patients endoscopic procedures may be the only option. Therapeutic success has been variable, and the lack of consensus suggests that no optimal therapy is available; rather, the current therapeutic options seem to be complementary, and the treatment should be individualized.
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PMID:Bronchopleural fistulas: an overview of the problem with special focus on endoscopic management. 1677 98

The diagnosis of pulmonary aspergillosis is based on serum-analysis, as well as histological and microbiological analysis of bronchial lavage and transbronchial biopsies. When Aspergillus develops within a preformed cavity, however, these tests are likely to be negative. In this situation, classic imaging techniques such as chest X-ray and high resolution-computed tomography (HR-CT) can be of great diagnostic use. We here describe the case of a 62-year-old woman with a history of breast cancer and subsequent ablation of the left breast and radiotherapy. The case demonstrates an example of a pleuropulmonary aspergilloma, in which sero- and micro-biological detection failed. Thorax HR-CT exhibited the cavity, a small persistent pneumothorax, partially filled by an oval density. This density clearly dislocated according to gravity following a positional change of the patient from supine to prone. The density thus revealed mobility which was typical of aspergilloma. Following excision, this diagnosis was confirmed. A density within a cavity may be differentiated by its mobility from differential diagnoses such as lung cancer which would not be expected to exhibit mobility.
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PMID:Diagnosis of aspergilloma in a pleural cavity (persistent pneumothorax) using classic imaging methods. 1668 12

CT-guided Percutaneous Transthoracic Biopsies (PTB) performed in the Radiology Department of Garcia de Orta Hospital between 2002 and 2004 to evaluate undetermined pulmonary lesions were retrospectively analysed. 89 fine needle aspiration biopsies (FNAB) and 13 core needle biopsies (CNB) were performed on 92 patients (67 men, mean age: 64.4 years). 82 lesions (89%) were nodular lesions (mean diameter: 3.8+/-1.7 cm, 65 peripheral). We did not observe complications among patients who underwent CNB; minor complications and pneumothorax requiring drainage occurred in 11 FNAB. 72 FNAB were considered adequate for cytology diagnosis; 72% of them positive for malignancy. All CNB were adequate and conclusive. From the 7 CNB performed on patients with previous FNAB, 3 allowed a better histological characterization and in 3 cases of inadequate FNAB, CNB was conclusive. All malignant lesions were nodules: 20 adenocarcinoma, 13 non-small cell lung cancer (SCLC), 10 epidermoid tumours, 5 small-cell lung cancer, 2 carcinoids, 1 bronchiolo alveolar carcinoma, 1 malignant mesothelioma and 8 metastasis. Unspecific/inflammatory lesions (n=5) were the most frequent benign lesions. Malignant lesions were more prevalent in older patients (p=0.007) and were larger (p=0.006). Spiculated and lobulated contour (p=0.05) were more prevalent in malignant lesions while regular contour was more frequent among benign lesions (p=0.0001). Gender, smoking, location, pleural tag, homogenous attenuation, cavitation, calcification, necrosis and air bronchogram did not differ significantly between benign and malignant nodules. This study shows that CT-guided PTB is a safe and effective procedure in the evaluation of undetermined pulmonary lesions.
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PMID:CT-guided percutaneous transthoracic biopsy in the evaluation of undetermined pulmonary lesions. 1711 22

For gated lung cancer radiotherapy, it is difficult to generate accurate gating signals due to the large uncertainties when using external surrogates and the risk of pneumothorax when using implanted fiducial markers. We have previously investigated and demonstrated the feasibility of generating gating signals using the correlation scores between the reference template image and the fluoroscopic images acquired during the treatment. In this paper, we present an in-depth study, aiming at the improvement of robustness of the algorithm and its validation using multiple sets of patient data. Three different template generating and matching methods have been developed and evaluated: (1) single template method, (2) multiple template method, and (3) template clustering method. Using the fluoroscopic data acquired during patient setup before each fraction of treatment, reference templates are built that represent the tumour position and shape in the gating window, which is assumed to be at the end-of-exhale phase. For the single template method, all the setup images within the gating window are averaged to generate a composite template. For the multiple template method, each setup image in the gating window is considered as a reference template and used to generate an ensemble of correlation scores. All the scores are then combined to generate the gating signal. For the template clustering method, clustering (grouping of similar objects together) is performed to reduce the large number of reference templates into a few representative ones. Each of these methods has been evaluated against the reference gating signal as manually determined by a radiation oncologist. Five patient datasets were used for evaluation. In each case, gated treatments were simulated at both 35% and 50% duty cycles. False positive, negative and total error rates were computed. Experiments show that the single template method is sensitive to noise; the multiple template and clustering methods are more robust to noise due to the smoothing effect of aggregation of correlation scores; and the clustering method results in the best performance in terms of computational efficiency and accuracy.
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PMID:Robust fluoroscopic respiratory gating for lung cancer radiotherapy without implanted fiducial markers. 1722 18

A 61-year-old man who had undergone left pneumonectomy 7 years before for lung cancer was scheduled for thoracoscopic partial pulmonary resection of the right lung because of pneumothorax. Anesthesia was induced with propofol and maintained with sevoflurane and thoracic epidural block. He was monitored with electrocardiogram, direct arterial pressure, pulse oximetry and capnogram. Arterial blood gas sampling was done as required. During the operation, ventilation was maintained with mechanical and intermittent manual ventilation. Hemodynamic status was stable and intra- and post-operative course was uneventful. PCPS, ECLS, CVC and PAC were not required. A successful and satisfactory anesthetic management was accomplished by good cooperation between anesthesiologists and surgeons.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management of surgical intervention for contralateral pneumothorax after left pneumonectomy]. 1724 51

Spontaneous pneumomediastinum (SPM) is defined as the presence of air in the mediastinum, developing in the absence of traumatic, iatrogenic, or preceding pulmonary pathologies (emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and lung cancer). The aim of this study was to review our experiences with SPM, underlining its symptomatology, diagnosis, treatment, and followup, and defining a reasonable course of assessment and management. A retrospective case series was conducted to identify adult patients with SPM who were diagnosed and treated in our institution between 1998 and 2005. Eighteen patients (10 males) were identified (average age = 25 +/- 4.8 years). Acute onset of chest pain was the predominant symptom at presentation. All patients developed clinically evident subcutaneous emphysema and underwent chest computerized tomography. Fiber bronchoscopy and echocardiogram were used selectively (8 patients). The average hospital stay was 6 (+/-1.4) days. Sixteen patients were conservatively treated, and only two patients were treated with thoracic drainage due to a related pneumothorax. The disease followed a benign evolution in all patients and, as of today, no relapse has been reported. SPM is an uncommon pathology with a usually benign course. The authors discuss SPM. A diagnostic algorithmic approach is necessary to rule out severe secondary entities and consequences that need urgent treatment.
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PMID:Spontaneous pneumomediastinum: experience in 18 adult patients. 1883 76


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