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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients who have a
lung cancer
in the residual lung after pneumonectomy should not be automatically excluded for surgical consideration. These patients should be carefully staged and evaluated physiologically. The most important initial differentiation is to distinguish a true second primary
lung cancer
from metastatic recurrent
lung cancer
. Meticulous staging with chest CT, PET, brain
MRI
, and mediastinoscopy should be able to successfully exclude metastatic disease, multifocal disease, or locally advanced tumors. Only patients who have stage I disease are candidates for this type of extended resection. Ideally, these patients should have small peripheral tumors that can be encompassed with a low-volume wedge resection. More extended resections, such as segmentectomy or right middle lobectomy, may be considered in some patients but seem to bear a higher operative morbidity and mortality. The need for an upper or lower lobectomy after contralateral pneumonectomy is probably an absolute contraindication to surgical resection. To tolerate pulmonary resection after pneumonectomy, and to obtain the desired survival benefit, patients should have a good to excellent performance status, no serious comorbidities, and a ppoFEV1 greater than 1.0 L/second. In these highly selected patients, pulmonary resection after pneumonectomy can be accomplished with an acceptable operative morbidity and mortality and, in true cases of metachronous second primary lung cancers, may achieve a 5-year survival rate of up to 50%.
...
PMID:Pulmonary resection after pneumonectomy. 1538 93
Proper selection and interpretation of imaging studies is essential to provide optimal treatment to patients who have
lung cancer
. The following combines the recommendations of the American College of Chest Physicians [74] and the authors' current clinical practice guidelines: --All patients who have known or suspected
lung cancer
should undergo a CT of the chest and upper abdomen. --An FDG-PET study should be performed, if available. --Mediastinoscopy should be performed in all patients except those who have peripheral small (<2 cm) tumors and no evidence of N2 disease on CT or PET imaging. --
MRI
should be performed for tumors of the superior sulcus to define the relationship of the tumor to adjacent neurovascular structures. --Patients who have neurologic signs or symptoms should undergo a brain imaging study (CT or
MRI
). --Screening for extrathoracic disease is not necessary in asymptomatic patients who have clinical stage I or II disease.
...
PMID:Current state of imaging for lung cancer staging. 1538 4
Sentinel node navigation surgery (SNNS) for lung caner has not yet been established. Sentinel node (SN) identification using dye or radioisotope has been developed; however, the SN identification rate was less than 50% in the dye method and use of radioisotopes is strongly restricted in Japan. The novel method using a CT or
MRI
contrast medium are expected. A study of local immune reaction for
lung cancer
in SN is also a very interesting issue.
...
PMID:[A review and development of sentinel node navigation surgery for lung cancer]. 1544 73
We evaluated the usefulness of double-dose (0.2 mmol/kg of gadoteridol) contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (C-E
MRI
) in detecting brain metastases of
lung cancer
. We prospectively enrolled 134 patients with
lung cancer
who had no neurologic symptoms and who underwent a staging work-up. Patients were assigned to receive both contrast-enhanced computerized tomography (C-E CT) and double-dose C-E
MRI
. Double-dose C-E
MRI
detected brain metastases in 19 patients, while C-E CT detected brain metastasis in only 12 of the 19 (P = 0.02). The 3-month survival rate for patients in double-dose C-E
MRI
group was found to be 2.06 times that of patients in a C-E CT group (P = 0.029), although the survival rate fell to 1.45 (P = 0.387) at 6 months. The results imply that double-dose C-E
MRI
changed the clinical stage of
lung cancer
patients. We concluded that double-dose C-E
MRI
improves the rate of detection of brain metastases during the initial staging of
lung cancer
.
Lung Cancer
2004 Dec
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography in the diagnoses of brain metastases of lung cancer. 1554 21
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
Limbic encephalitis was identified as a clinicopathological entity in 1968. Up to a few years ago, 200 cases were described, most associated with
lung cancer
and more infrequently with other tumors. The recent identification of patients with this syndrome, idiopathic limbic encephalitis, who never develop cancer and have high titers of antibodies to voltage-gated potassium channels (VGKC) and an excellent response to immunosuppressive therapy, has extended the etiological spectrum and suggests that the syndrome may be under-recognized. The disorder, which develops in a few days or weeks, is characterized by the development of short-term memory loss, seizures, confusion and psychiatric features. The presence of symptoms beyond the limbic system is highly suggestive of a paraneoplastic origin. When limbic encephalitis is suspected, the following tests should be performed in order to demonstrate: a) involvement of the temporal lobes (EEG and brain
MRI
); b) presence of inflammatory abnormalities in the CSF, and c) the presence of onconeural antibodies or anti-VGKC. Once the diagnosis is confirmed by the clinical picture and
MRI
findings, treatment must be initiated without waiting for the antibody results because its negativity does not exclude the diagnosis. Detection of an onconeural antibody will confirm that the limbic syndrome is paraneoplastic and will help us to search for an underlying tumor and to predict possible response to the treatment. The recommended treatment is cycles of methylprednisolone (1 g/day for 3 to 5 days). Therapeutic response in the idiopathic limbic encephalitis is excellent and may be good in limbic encephalitis with anti-Ma2 or without onconeural antibodies. On the contrary, immunosuppressant treatment is not usually effective in limbic encephalitis associated to anti-Hu antibodies.
...
PMID:[Limbic encephalitis: a probably under-recognized syndrome]. 1570 18
We evaluated diagnosis and treatment of four cases of meningeal carcinomatosis associated with primary
lung cancer
: case 1; small cell carcinoma (64 years old), case 2; small cell carcinoma (50 years old), case 3; adenocarcinoma (53 years old), and case 4; adenocarcinoma (55 years old). Determination of tumor markers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) together with the
MRI
findings that Gd-DTPA-enhanced T1-weighted image showing high intensity signal along the spinal cord was clinically useful in the diagnosis of meningeal carcinomatosis. Two of four patients received intrathecal chemotherapy and/or CSF drainage through Ommaya-Reservoir, resulting in dramatic improvement of various symptoms such as motor weakness and vesicorectal disorder. Intrathecal chemotherapy and placement of an Ommaya-Reservoir for CSF drainage should be considered to provide better Quality of Life (QOL) when patient can tolerate it.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of meningeal carcinomatosis associated with primary lung cancer]. 1580 Dec 81
Cancer metastasis to the skeletal muscle is very rare. In this report, we describe 7 cases (6 males, 1 female, age 55-76, mean 66 y.o.) with unusual presentation of cancer metastasis to the skeletal muscle, illustrating the principal clinical, radiographic and histologic features. The primary tumors were
lung cancer
in 4 cases (3 adenocarcinomas, 1 squamous cell carcinoma) and renal cell carcinoma, esophageal carcinoma, hepatocellular carcinoma in each one. The metastatic sites were the adductors, iliopsoas, rectus femoris, biceps bracii, triceps bracii, deltoid, and paravertebral muscle in each one. The unusual sites of metastases were visualized by CT and/or
MRI
and confirmed by needle or trocar biopsy. Five patients died in 2 to 24 months with the average of 8 months after initial examination.
...
PMID:Skeletal muscle metastasis secondary to cancer--a report of seven cases. 1580 88
Accurate evaluation of disease extent is mandatory when the diagnosis of resectable
lung cancer
is established. Staging has a significant impact on subsequent therapeutic options and prognosis. Radiologists can now rely on numerous instruments, each with different advantages and limitations. The procedure of choice is still chest X-ray whose intrinsic limitations require better tumor characterization with chest CT. CT difficulties in the differential diagnosis between the tumor and secondary changes occurring in adjacent structures can be overcome by 18F-FDG-PET or
MRI
. Functional information is acquired with the former and multiparametric information with the latter. According to the case, further extension to adjacent structures can be evaluated based on CT or
MRI
. For lymph node and distant metastasis PET is increasingly used, except for brain parenchyma where
MRI
is definitely more accurate in the detection of brain metastasis.
...
PMID:Noninvasive staging of lung cancer. 1585 21
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