Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 29-year-old woman who underwent evaluation for a 3-month history of left-sided
back pain
proved to have a left pleural tumor accompanied by a bloody pleural effusion (cytological class II). Three years previously, a chest roentgenogram had been normal. The tumor originated from the parietal pleura at the level of the first three intercostal muscles and was excised completely in continuity with these muscles, including a margin of normal muscle. The tumor measured 15x12 cm and the pathologic diagnosis was benign solitary fibrous tumor; while the tumor invaded the intercostal muscles, no histologically malignant features were present. Long-term follow-up is planned because a possibility of local recurrence exists.
Lung Cancer
PMID:Benign solitary fibrous tumor of the parietal pleura which invaded the intercostal muscle. 1116 14
We encountered a terminal
lung cancer
patient with severe
back pain
and dyspnea who refused the use of morphine, and succeeded in home palliative care with the use of an original prescription (CA), the main ingredient of which was codeine phosphate.
...
PMID:[Home drug therapy for a patient who rejected use of morphine--management of dyspnea and pain by codeine phosphate]. 1119 Mar 25
A 69-year old Japanese woman with hypertension was admitted because of continuous
back pain
and recurrent hemoptysis. Radiographic findings showed an enhanced irregular mass, at the aortic arch fed by the tracheal artery, which implied both a penetrating aortic atherosclerotic ulcer and
lung cancer
. Diagnostic surgery revealed no evidence of cancer but did reveal a rupture of the intima at the distal part of the aortic arch. It is assumed that the transmural oozing occurred after development of the penetrating aortic ulcer, which formed an extra-aortic hematoma and caused surrounding inflammation, and led to tracheal artery feeding. The intramural hematoma might have weakened vascular wall tension from the aorta, and formed an oozing extra-aortic hematoma instead of an acute rupture.
...
PMID:A case of penetrating aortic atherosclerotic ulcer with hemoptysis. 1123 96
Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is an excellent tool for the diagnosis of thoracic aortic pathology. However, not all lesions of the aortic wall represent primary pathology of the aorta. This case presents an elderly, hypertensive patient with
back pain
and crescentic thickening of the aortic wall that proved to represent external aortic infiltration by
lung cancer
. Invasion of the aortic wall mimicking intramural hematoma should be considered the differential diagnosis of patients with dissection-like symptoms and crescentic aortic lesions.
...
PMID:Squamous cell carcinoma masquerading as a thoracic intramural hematoma. 1126 43
A 32yr-old nonsmoking male, diagnosed as having X-linked agamma-globulinemia, presented with fever, cough with purulent sputum, a very intense
back pain
and a mass of 10 centimetres in lower left lobe. Diagnostic evaluation revealed a squamous cell carcinoma with very aggressive metastases at L3. Malignancies are the second leading cause of death in children and adults with congenital immunodeficiency disorders, mostly non-Hodgkin lymphomas and gastric and colon adenocarcinomas, but this is the first report of
lung cancer
in a patient with X-linked agammaglobulinemia.
Lung cancer
incidence has been reported to be higher in patients with other diseases of the lung, however, there is no clear evidence of the role of bronchiectasis in developing
lung cancer
. It is possible that a longer survival for patients with X-LA recently diagnosed, and an association of chronic bronchial infection, could favour the development of pulmonary neoplasm.
...
PMID:X-linked agammaglobulinaemia and squamous lung cancer. 1140 38
A 70-year-old woman with a known chronic dissecting aneurysm of the descending thoracic aorta presented with new-onset
back pain
and hemoptysis. The hemoptysis was thought to be the result of invasion of the bronchial tree by the aneurysm. During surgical repair, a lesion that appeared to be a pulmonary abscess was discovered to be adhering to the aortic tissue, and the patient underwent a localized pulmonary resection. The pathology report of the surgical specimens revealed squamous cell carcinoma of the lung with infiltration of the aortic wall. The patient died of
lung cancer
6 months later. Hemoptysis was an unusual presentation in a case of
lung cancer
that had invaded a stable chronic aortic aneurysm.
...
PMID:Hemoptysis as an unusual presenting symptom of invasion of a descending thoracic aortic aneurysmal dissection by lung cancer. 1207 73
A 58-year old man was admitted to our hospital complaining of right
back pain
, fever, abdominal fullness and epigastralgia. Chest CT revealed a mass shadow in the right S6 together with destruction of the thoracic vertebrae. These findings suggested
lung cancer
and its spinal invasion. A transbronchial lung biopsy specimen showed inflammatory lymphocyte infiltration. MRI T2 image of the spine showed a high intensity at the Th7/8 disc space, suggesting pyogenic spondylitis. After broad-spectrum antibiotics including PAMP/BP and CLDM were administered, both the spinal lesion and the pulmonary lesion improved gradually. The clinical course suggested that the pulmonary inflammatory lesion had spread from pyogenic spondylitis. In our case, the pyogenic spondylitis was mimicking a spinal invasion of
lung cancer
. In addition, MRI is thought to be useful for diagnosing spinal lesions.
...
PMID:[A case of pyogenic spondylitis mimicking a spinal invasion of lung cancer]. 1556 5
Superior vena cava syndrome is a medical condition determined by the mechanisms of extrinsic compression, invasion or thrombosis of the superior vena cava. The most common underlying cause is a malignant process, especially
lung cancer
and lymphoma. Typical symptoms include progressive dyspnea, head and upper body edema and cyanosis. Most patients can be treated with appropriately directed chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Accurate diagnosis of the underlying etiology needs to be established before treatment. Only under extreme emergency conditions such as laryngeal or cerebral edema irradiation should be initiated without a histological diagnosis. With the refinement of endovascular stents, percutaneous stenting is being increasingly used as primary treatment modality. Metastatic spinal cord compression is one of the most dreadful complications of cancer. In most patients the initial symptom is progressive
back pain
with an axial or radicular distribution. MRI should be preferred in the diagnostic work-up, corticosteroids be administered promptly after biopsy. Radiation therapy or surgical treatment should be started as soon as possible.
...
PMID:[Compression syndromes]. 1559 2
Lung cancer
is the most frequently encountered cancer in humans and commonly metastasizes to brain and bone. Metastasis to the clivus is very rare and there have been no previous reports. A 51-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital complaining of headache, and left shoulder, arm and
back pain
. The chest X-ray showed a left paracardiac mass measuring 4x4 cm in diameter and the thorax computed tomographic examination revealed a 4x4 cm mass in the left lower lobe, left hilar and mediastinal lymphadenopathy, and multiple lytic lesions in the thoracic vertebral bodies. Head magnetic resonance imaging showed a mass in the clivus with bony destruction. Bronchoscopic examination revealed an exophytic endobronchial lesion in the left lower bronchus lumen and a biopsy was taken from this lesion. The histopathological diagnosis was "poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma". A punch biopsy was taken from the clivus via the transnasal-transphenoidal route. Histopathological findings of this biopsy were similar to the primary site tumor. We report a rare case of clivus metastasis from squamous cell lung cancer.
...
PMID:Clivus metastasis of squamous cell carcinoma: a rare location. 1563 26
We report 4 cases of spinal cord metastases of
lung cancer
detected by MRI. Histologically, 3 of the 4 cases were small cell carcinoma and the other was adenocarcinoma. All 3 cases of small cell carcinoma had neoplastic meningitis. MRI taken in these cases showed the multiple nodules in the cauda equina, which were seeded from brain metastases. One of them had intramedullary spinal cord metastases, which appeared as enlargement of the spinal cord or nodules in the spinal cord on MRI. Leg paralysis and incontinence progressed in all cases. The other case of adenocarcinoma had epidural spinal cord compression due to spinal metastasis. In this case irradiation and corticosteroids relieved her leg and
back pain
. Spinal cord metastases should be considered as a differential diagnosis in patients with numbness, pain or weakness in the extremities.
...
PMID:[Spinal cord metastases in lung cancer: a clinical review of four cases]. 1596 11
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>