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

The incidence of paramalignant disorders was studied in 280 consecutive patients with early lung cancer confirmed histologically. The commonest disorders were weight loss exceeding 6.4 kg (30.7 percent of the series), finger clubbing (29 percent), fever (21.1 percent), and endocrinopathies (12.1 percent). Paramalignant diseases are common even in early lung cancer and all patients should have investigations for their detection.
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PMID:Incidence of paramalignant disorders in bronchogenic carcinoma. 16 4

This paper describes the characteristic clinical features, mortality and survival rate of 202 patients diagnosed as having asbestosis by the Institute of Occupational Health between 1934 and 1976. One hundred and thirty-three patients were subjected to a clinical reexamination. Major findings included breathlessness in 118 (88.7%), persistent sputum in 95 (71.4%), crepitations in 77 (58.0%) and finger clubbing in 43 (32.3%). Of the 95 patients with persistent sputum, 19 (20.0%) were nonsmokers. Of the 174 men registered as having asbestosis, 56 had died, whereas the expected number of deaths among men of the same age in the Finnish general population was only 23.4. The respective figures for lung cancer were 19 observed and 2.1 expected. No excess mortality was found for other malignomas. Among men with asbestosis, the life expectancy was shorter for smokers than for non- and exsmokers.
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PMID:Clinical features, mortality and survival of patients with asbestosis. 73 87

A study of patients in whom soft-palate pigmentation appeared to be associated with pulmonary disease has been reported. A significant number of these patients had diagnosed or suspected bronchogenic carcinoma. The possibility that this oral finding may be predictive of the presence of lung cancer, or of a high degree of probability of future development of lung cancer, indicates a need for additional investigation. At this point the evidence strongly suggests that when soft-palate pigmentation is seen in a patient with lung disease, cancer should be suspected until it is definitely ruled out. The paucity of patients in whom this sign is seen suggests the need for study by other investigators. ACTH levels should be evaluated, as should plasma zinc values, which have been demonstrated to decrease in lung cancer as well as other diseases. Following the patients prospectively certainly is indicated. In conjunction with the Department of Laboratory Medicine, limited initial additional investigations have been made of the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels on three of the outpatients reported. These assays used the hemagglutination-inhibition technique and are limited to investigational use by the Food and Drug Administration. In this laboratory the normal CEA level is 5.2 +/- 1.6 ng./ml. Results in two patients with known chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were 5.5 and 5.6 ng./ml. The third patient with soft-palate pigmentation and an undiagnosed pulmonary problem had a CEA level of 10.2 ng./ml. She also had clubbing of the fingers. The senior author would be particularly interested in establishing a registry of similar cases observed by others.
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PMID:Soft-palate pigmentation in lung disease, including cancer. 106 77

A 58 year old housewife with tumor shadow in the right upper lung field on the chest X-ray was admitted. Marked swelling and severe arthralgia of both extremities and soft tissue clubbing of the fingers had been presented for two years prior to admission. The radiographs and bone scintigrams indicated proliferating periostitis along the long bones. Bronchofiberscope showed the obstruction of B2a of the right bronchus but the histological diagnosis was not established. Serum level of CEA and IAP were found to be high. Soon after the right upper lobectomy, arthralgia was significantly improved. The histological evaluation revealed a well differentiated adenocarcinoma of a primary lung cancer without mediastinal lymph node metastasis. Within 4 months the serum level of CEA and IAP normalized, the clubbing and the periosteal changes of the bones regressed.
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PMID:[A case of hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy caused by adenocarcinoma of the lung]. 150 14

We describe three patients with unilateral facial pain due to non-metastatic lung cancer and review 11 published cases. Pain, most frequently located on the right side and around the ear, as well as digital clubbing can be clues to an early diagnosis. Compression of the vagus nerve by the tumour or by mediastinal adenopathy is most likely responsible for the facial pain and could play a role in pulmonary osteoarthropathy.
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PMID:Unilateral facial pain as the first symptom of lung cancer: are there diagnostic clues? 162 15

Idiopathic interstitial pneumonia (IIP) is known to have a tendency to be associated with lung cancer. Clinical characteristics of lung cancer associated with IIP are discussed in this article. Thirteen cases of lung cancer associated with IIP were examined from 1975 to 1988. A total of 590 cases of lung cancer and 38 cases of IIP were observed during that period. The 13 cases of lung cancer were found to be associated with IIP during the follow-up observation of our patients. Of these 13 patients, 12 men and a woman, the average age was 68.0 years old. All these 13 cases were ex- or present smokers. Five cases of lung cancer had no symptoms, but were detected by abnormal shadows on chest X-ray. Eight cases were detected symptoms. The duration from the onset of IIP to the onset of lung cancer was 36.5 +/- 23.5 months. Primary sites of lung cancer were distributed as follows. Nine cancers were in the left lung (64%) and five cancers were in the right lung (36%). Three cancers were in the hilar region (21%) and 11 cancers were in the peripheral lung field (79%). The numbers of lung cancers were equal in upper and lower lobe. The most common histological type was squamous cell carcinoma, followed by adenocarcinoma. Most cases were in stage III or IV. Three cases were operated, 4 were treated with chemotherapy, 4 were treated with chemotherapy plus irradiation, and 2 cases were treated by BRMs. The frequency of weight loss or finger clubbing in these patients was higher than in IIP patients without lung cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Lung cancer associated with idiopathic interstitial pneumonia]. 221 26

Based in our own clinical studies, we state our point of view, regarding two controversial issues in the literature: 1) the relationship between digital clubbing and hypertrophic osteoartropathy (HOA), and 2) its pathogenic mechanisms. We agree with the theory which proposes that clubbing is the initial, and most conspicuous sing of a full syndrome, (HOA). These entities develop when the lung fails to inactivate a vasodilator and bone-remodeling substance normally present in the systemic venous circulation. This failure of the lung could be due to exclusion, as is the case in the right-to-left shunts, or because of functional deterioration that develops in conditions such as in lung cancer or cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:[Hippocratic fingers and hypertrophic osteoarthropathy. Their interrelation and probable physiopathogenic mechanisms]. 293 99

One hundred and fifty five male cases of asbestosis certified by the London Pneumoconiosis Medical Panel during 1968-74 were followed up during 1978-9, 4-11 (mean 7.5) years after certification. Fifty nine patients had died, 23 (39%) from lung cancer, 6 (10%) from mesothelioma, and 11 (19%) from other respiratory causes. The number of observed deaths was 2.25 times greater than expected and 7.4 times greater than expected for lung cancer. Adenocarcinoma was the commonest histological type but other cell types were also increased. Finger clubbing (p less than 0.01) and percentage of predicted FEV1 (p less than 0.01) were of value in predicting death, but increasing profusion of small opacities greater than 1/0 (ILO/U-C international classification of radiographs of pneumoconiosis, 1971), duration of exposure to asbestos, time from first exposure to asbestos, and percentage of predicted vital capacity and transfer factor did not predict death.
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PMID:Mortality in cases of asbestosis diagnosed by a pneumoconiosis medical panel. 343 33

Lung cancer was found in 20 (9.8%) of 205 patients with cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis (CFA) or 12.9% of the 155 patients in this series followed to death. An excess relative risk of lung cancer of 14.1 was found in patients with CFA compared to the general population of comparable age and sex, allowing for the lengths of follow-up of the CFA patients. The relative risk for male smokers was (observed/expected) 15+1.06 = 14.2, and for female smokers (O/E) 2/0.3 = 6.7. Only one male and one female non-smoker had lung cancer. These data suggest that there is an excess risk of lung cancer not wholly accounted for by age, sex, or smoking habit. The distribution of histological types was not obviously different from that found in lung cancer without pulmonary fibrosis. Large opacities suggestive of lung cancer were present at the time of first hospital attendance for symptoms relating to CFA in four of the 20 patients. Finger clubbing was present in 19 (95%) compared with 116/185 (63%) of those so far not developing cancer. There were no other clinical differences at presentation. In particular, cancer was not found especially in those with longer survival from the onset of symptoms of CFA or with a greater initial radiographic change.
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PMID:Cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis and lung cancer. 743 10

Digital clubbing is a classic cutaneous manifestation of pulmonary disease, but its mechanism is unknown. We describe a patient with lung cancer and clubbing in whom positron emission tomography (PET) demonstrated, for the first time, that increased glucose metabolism occurs at the nailbed. PET may contribute to future investigations of digital clubbing.
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PMID:Digital clubbing. Demonstration with positron emission tomography. 770 35


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