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

To study the effect of the environments shared by spouses on the development of cancer and some chronic diseases, we analyzed the correspondence of disease history in 21,592 fathers and mothers using the baseline data of a population-based cohort study. The observed number of cases (O) whose parents had the same disease history was statistically significantly greater than the expected (E); the O/E ratio was 1.53 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.43-1.63) for all malignant neoplasms, 5.22 (95% CI: 2.81-9.70) for esophageal cancer, 1.63 (95% CI: 1.37-1.93) for stomach cancer, 3.01 (95% CI: 1.89-4.79) for colorectal cancer, 3.90 (95% CI: 2.75-5.53) for liver cancer, 3.14 (95% CI: 1.95-5.08) for lung cancer, 6.73 (95% CI: 2.53-17.87) for bladder cancer, 1.66 (95% CI: 1.54-1.78) for apoplexy and 1.67 (95% CI: 1.51-1.86) for heart disease. The results of the present study suggest that the environmental factors shared by family members for a long time may contribute to familial aggregation of cancer and some chronic diseases.
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PMID:Correspondence in cancer history between husbands and wives. 211 61

The impact, time trends and potential for prevention of premature deaths in Canada were assessed. There were almost 100,000 deaths before age 75 in Canada during 1986 resulting in over 1.7 million potential years of life lost (PYLL). The three leading broad disease categories responsible for PYLL were cancer, injuries/violence and cardiovascular disease. In both sexes, coronary heart disease, car accidents, lung cancer and perinatal conditions ranked in the top 5 specific diseases responsible for PYLL; breast cancer (females) and suicide (males) also ranked in the top 5 conditions. Over the period 1969 to 1986, death rates among persons less than age 75 increased for 3 conditions among females and 11 conditions among males. Lung cancer and brain cancer death rates increased in both sexes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease death rates increased among females only and death rates for suicide and 8 types of cancer increased among males only. Over the same period, death rates declined for 37 discrete disease categories among both females and males including particularly large improvements for coronary heart disease, stroke, car accidents and perinatal conditions. An estimated 50,000 or over 50% of all premature deaths per year are preventable through control of smoking, hypertension, elevated serum cholesterol, diabetes and alcohol abuse. About 6,000 premature deaths are avoidable through improvements in medical care.
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PMID:Premature deaths in Canada: impact, trends and opportunities for prevention. 225 55

The usefulness of surveillance in relating chronic disease trends to recent changes in risk exposures is often questioned on the grounds that these trends respond slowly, reflecting long periods between aetiological exposures and clinical onset of disease. We challenge this preconception on the basis of a review of several important risk factors and diseases: alcohol and liver cirrhosis; tobacco and stroke, cardiovascular disease, and lung cancer; and oestrogens and endometrial cancer. Data from cohort, cross-sectional, and modelling studies demonstrate that the time between removal of exposures and the onset of decline in morbidity or mortality is not defined by the time between initial exposure and disease occurrence. Rather, the pattern of lifetime exposures (with recent exposures often having a dominant effect), the dynamics of the disease process, and the segment of the population with reduced exposures determine how soon the decline begins.
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PMID:Public health surveillance of non-infectious chronic diseases: the potential to detect rapid changes in disease burden. 226 57

Changes in the human nail frequently serve as an indicator of local and systemic disease. Alterations in the morphology, structure and growth characteristics of the nail accompany chronic cigarette smoking; yellow pigmentation of the nail plate--referred to as the "nicotine sign"--is common. The clubbed yellow nail may indicate the presence of lung cancer. In contrast to the ominous nature of the clubbed yellow nail, we describe a sign that is more propitious: the sudden cessation of smoking due to an intercurrent disease, often a cerebrovascular accident (CVA), leads to the development of a distinct line of demarcation between the distal pigmented nail and the newly emerging proximal nonpigmented nail. We propose the term "harlequin nail" for this curious physical sign. By measurement of the distance between the proximal nail base fold and the line of demarcation, we can deduce the date smoking ceased (and, by inference, the approximate date of a CVA in a patient unable to volunteer this information). This sign also serves as a reminder that the "nicotine nail" remains discolored only because of dynamic restaining of the nail with tobacco by-products.
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PMID:The harlequin nail. A marker for smoking cessation. 229 46

An anecdotal series of nine patients (three men and six women with an average age of 57 years) presented with progressive neurologic deterioration while on medical therapy for large right hemispheric cerebral infarction. Clinical signs of uncal herniation (anisocoria or fixed and dilated pupils, and/or left hemiplegia with right decerebrate posturing) were present in seven of these nine patients. Computerized tomography of the head confirmed mass effect from cerebral edema. It was the clinical judgment of the treating neurologists and neurosurgeons that each of these nine patients would perish unless surgical decompression of the infarcted brain was performed. Accordingly, each was treated with right hemicraniectomy and dural augmentation. Six patients demonstrated neurologic improvement on the first postoperative day. One patient, with a postoperative diagnosis of lung cancer, died 1 month after surgery. The remaining eight patients are currently living with their families with a follow-up period ranging from 5 to 25 months. Patient outcome as evaluated by the Barthel Index indicates that three individuals are functioning with minimal assistance and that the remaining six patients are functionally dependent. After rehabilitative therapy, four patients returned for elective cranioplasty. These results suggest that hemicraniectomy can be an effective lifesaving procedure for malignant cerebral edema after large hemispheric infarction.
Stroke 1990 Jun
PMID:Treatment of right hemispheric cerebral infarction by hemicraniectomy. 234 90

The developed countries are often viewed as being relatively homogeneous in terms of health conditions. This is not the case, however. Whilst the overall level of life expectancy in these countries (73.7 years) is well in excess of that observed in the majority of developing countries, there are nonetheless very substantial differences in health status among and between the developed countries. Female life expectancy is typically 6-8 years longer than that of males. The gap in life expectancy between Japan and some countries of Northern Europe, on the one hand, and the nations of Eastern Europe on the other, is of the same order of magnitude. Of the 11 million deaths reported in the developed countries each year, roughly 5.5 million or almost exactly 50% are attributable to cardiovascular diseases. Of these deaths, 2.4 million are coded to ischaemic heart disease and 1.5 million to stroke (cerebrovascular disease). Cancer (all forms) accounts for 2.3 million deaths (21%), 500,000 of which are due to lung cancer alone. External causes of death claim 750,000 lives each year in the developed countries, with suicide and motor-vehicle accidents each accounting for around 180,000 deaths. This pattern of mortality, when viewed in conjunction with the epidemiological evidence about the principal risk factors associated with these causes of death, strongly suggests that national health-for-all strategies must continue to emphasize individual health consciousness as the primary means of achieving national health goals.
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PMID:Who dies of what? A comparative analysis of mortality conditions in developed countries around 1987. 237 29

A major right hemispheric infarct developed in a 31-year-old man within forty-eight hours of lung resection for metastatic synovial-cell sarcoma. Post mortem exam revealed tumorous occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. Major stroke from cerebral tumor embolus should be seriously considered in patients with primary or metastatic lung cancer who have had a very recent pneumonectomy, especially when there are symptoms and signs of multi-organ or extremity ischemia.
Stroke
PMID:Major cerebral infarction from tumor embolus. 301 31

Serum from a 60-year-old man with multiple myeloma (monoclonal IgA-lambda) and peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy showed immunohistochemical binding to normal human endoneurium in dilutions up to 1:6000 (IgA = 1 mg/dl). The binding was shown to be specific for IgA-lambda and it was negative for IgA-kappa, IgG and IgM. Absorption of the serum with peripheral myelin eliminated the myelin immunostaining. Peptic digestion of the serum failed to eliminate immunostaining of the endoneurium. Immunoblot analysis revealed reactivity of the monoclonal IgA with 58,000, 43,000 and 18,500 dalton components of human nerve endoneurium. Sera from two patients with monoclonal IgA without peripheral neuropathy, from one patient with peripheral neuropathy and lung cancer, from one patient with stroke and from six normal subjects failed to stain myelin in sections of peripheral nerves or to react in immunoblots at comparable serum concentrations. Axonal staining was seen with some of the control sera. The relationship of the findings to the pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathy in multiple myeloma is discussed.
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PMID:Binding of serum IgA of multiple myeloma to normal peripheral nerve. 301 99

To determine the outcome of patients with carotid transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) and normal cerebral angiograms, we assessed 68 patients (40 men, 28 women) aged 24-72 (mean 53.5) years for recurrent TIAs and strokes and for the development of cardiac disease over 2-6 (mean 4.4) years. All but one patient had a follow-up interview in early 1987; that patient had died of an unrelated cause (lung cancer) 18 months after the presenting TIA. The diagnosis was changed at the follow-up interview in three patients (multiple sclerosis, meningioma, migraine). Among the 64 remaining patients, at admission cranial computed tomography had shown cerebral infarction in 11 of 64, two-dimensional echocardiography had been abnormal in nine of 61, Holter monitoring had been abnormal in eight of 45, and twelve-lead electrocardiography had been abnormal in three of 64. Two patients had abnormalities on both echocardiography and Holter monitoring. At the follow-up interview of the 64 remaining patients, TIAs had recurred in nine and three had developed a completed stroke; cardiac disease (angina in seven, myocardial infarction in four) was noted in 11 patients. Findings from cardiac investigations on admission in the nine patients with recurrent TIAs had been abnormal in six and normal in three; all three patients who developed a stroke had had abnormal cardiac findings. Overall, further neurologic or cardiac events occurred in 12 of 46 patients (26%) with normal and in 10 of 18 patients (55.5%) with abnormal findings on admission (p less than 0.01). In the presence of normal angiograms, extensive cardiac investigations may help predict the outcome of patients with TIAs.
Stroke 1988 Oct
PMID:Transient ischemic attacks and normal cerebral angiograms: a follow-up study. 317 81

Mortalities from selected causes from 1973 to 1982 among Koreans, Chinese, and Americans residing in Japan were compared with those of Japanese. In the Korean population, besides the well-documented excess in mortalities from liver cancer, lung cancer, liver cirrhosis and male tuberculosis, a rather prominent elevation was observed for mortalities from female tuberculosis and diabetes mellitus in both sexes. Distinctive features in the Chinese population were increased mortalities from liver cancer and female lung cancer and lowered mortality from stomach cancer, and these findings are consistent with the observations among Chinese in other areas. Mortalities from diabetes mellitus and liver cirrhosis was moderately increased in this population as well. Americans in Japan by and large showed a mortality pattern similar to that in the US although mortality from stroke among female Americans was rather elevated during the period 1973-1977. Epidemiological studies on Koreans and Chinese in Japan with reference to their lifestyle are strongly required.
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PMID:Cause-specific mortality among Koreans, Chinese and Americans in Japan, 1973-1982. 366 40


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