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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (
sore throat
)
2,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The first symptoms of
cancer
of the oesophagus in 82 Xhosa patients were found to be dysphagia (43%), interscapular back pain (23%),
sore throat
(21%) and epigastric pain (11%). More than half of the patients in whom a
sore throat
was the first symptom of the disease described the simultaneous occurrence of oropharyngeal lesions (amaqhakuva). No correlation could be found between the first symptoms and the characteristics of the oesophageal carcinoma at the time of presentation.
...
PMID:The first symptoms of carcinoma of the oesophagus, with particular reference to amaqhakuva. A report from the Republic of Transkei. 46 28
Because supraglottic
cancer
usually is diagnosed late and metastasizes early, the cure rate is poorer than for glottic
cancer
. Supraglottic lesions can spread in any direction. The main method of diagnosis is either indirect or direct laryngoscopy, and the main symptoms are vague
throat pain
, otalgia, hemoptysis, hoarseness, and enlarged cervical lymph nodes. Roentgenographic examination is useful only as a supplement to other diagnostic measures. Staging of the disease is important in determining the most effective therapy and in predicting the results of treatment. Treatment should be individualized for each patient and should be selected on the basis of lesion size and site, the presence or absence of regional metastasis, the general health of the patient, and the likelihood of faithful follow-up.
...
PMID:Symposium. ENT for nonspecialists. Supraglottic. 112 51
Twenty-two cases of early squamous cell carcinoma of the arytenoid cartilage staged as T1 according to the 1983 American Joint Committee for
Cancer
Staging Classification system were reviewed. Eighteen percent of the patients showed no symptoms. In the remaining 82%, the main presenting symptom was pain in the form of
sore throat
, odynophagia, or otalgia. Radiotherapy and partial laryngeal surgery were the options retained for the treatment of the larynx. A "watch and wait" policy or preventive treatment of the ipsilateral jugulocarotid lymph nodes were the treatment options retained for the neck. Significant differences were noted in terms of local and nodal recurrence between the two programs. Results indicate that partial laryngeal surgery with total arytenoidectomy and preventive treatment of the neck appear to be advisable for this particular type of primary lesion.
...
PMID:T1 squamous cell carcinoma of the arytenoid. 149 55
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) contributes to the development of many otolaryngologic symptoms and conditions, including chronic throat clearing, cough,
sore throat
, contact ulcer and granuloma, globus pharyngeus, cervical dysphagia,
cancer
of the larynx, subglottic stenosis, and cricoarytenoid arthritis. These conditions are discussed and the pathogenesis of GERD is also detailed.
...
PMID:Laryngopharyngeal manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease. 175 20
A clinical study was made of 131 patients with laryngeal cancer treated in our department during 13 years from 1975 to 1987. The mean age of patients was 64.8 years, and the male-female ratio was 20.8:1. There were 87 cases of the glottic type, 42 of the supraglottic, and 2 of the subglottic type. Cases in the early stages (stage I, II) predominated in the glottic type, whereas advanced stage tumors (stage III, IV) were predominant in the supraglottic type (chi 2-test, p less than 0.01). Hoarseness was the most frequent complaint in the patients with glottic
cancer
. The proportion of complaints other than hoarseness, such as
sore throat
, on the other hand, was significantly higher among patients with supraglottic
cancer
(chi 2-test, p less than 0.01). There was no significant correlation between stage and duration of complaints until visits to our department. The overall five-year survival rate was 73.8%. The five-year survivals for the glottic and supraglottic type were 84.3 and 54.3% respectively, and for stage I through stage IV were 94.6, 73.7, 58.6, and 36.4%, respectively. In patients classified as T1 or T2, the following treatment is recommended as basic policy: radiotherapy as initial treatment and, if unsuccessful, secondary salvage surgery should be performed. In patients classified as T3 or T4, however, total laryngectomy is recommended as initial treatment. Metastases to cervical lymph nodes were observed in 6 patients with glottic
cancer
and 14 with supraglottic
cancer
, and the incidence of cervical lymph node metastases was significantly higher in the supraglottic type (chi 2-test, p less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical study on laryngeal cancer]. 238 32
The clinical and pathologic findings were studied in 68 patients with primary lymphoma of Waldeyer's ring (WR). The initial sites included: tonsil (51%; 9% bilateral), nasopharynx (35%), base of tongue (9%), and multiple areas (4%). The mean age was 58 years, with a male to female ratio of 1.1:1.0. Tonsillar and base of tongue lesions presented with
sore throat
and dysphagia, whereas nasopharyngeal lymphomas most commonly presented with nasal, auditory, and cranial nerve sympatomatology. A neck mass was the sole presenting symptom in 12% of patients. Work-up showed 42% Stage I, 47% Stage II, 4% Stage III, and 7% Stage IV. All were non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Diffuse architecture predominated (71%) and 70% had a histiocytic or large cell morphology (diffuse histiocytic 51%, nodular histiocytic 19%). The National
Cancer
Institute (NCI) Working Formulation grades were 13% low, 81% intermediate, and 6% high. In difficult cases, detection of monoclonal immunoglobulin, absence of keratin staining, and lack of epithelial features by electron microscopy were useful adjuncts aiding in diagnosis. Following complete remission, 28 patients relapsed, 75% of these within 2 years (median, 10 months). Thirty-seven (54%) patients died with disease (median survival, 27 months). Of these, 89% had disseminated lymphoma. Local-regional disease was the direct cause of death in 13%. Recurrence or persistence of disease in WR occurred in 9% of cases, most with initial clinical evidence of soft tissue extension. Stage I patients had a significantly better median survival (67 months) than Stage II patients (20 months) (P = 0.03). Prognostically favorable histologic parameters included lower NCI Working Formulation grade and follicular architecture. Ten patients (15%) developed extranodal disease, eight involving the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, and all died within 1 year of its occurrence. The findings indicate that stage and certain histologic parameters are important prognostic factors in WR lymphoma. The study confirms the association of primary WR lymphoma with other extranodal disease, particularly involving the GI tract, and emphasizes the poor prognosis of patients in whom this occurs.
Cancer
1985 Jul 01
PMID:Primary lymphoma of Waldeyer's ring. Clinicopathologic study of 68 cases. 389 Oct 63
Six renal transplant recipients with abnormal lymphoproliferative disorders were studied in an attempt to define their clinical features and the role of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in their pathogenesis. Patients were either teenage (three) or in the sixth decade (three). The younger patients presented an average of 3 months after transplantation with fever,
sore throat
, and lymphadenopathy; had been markedly immunosuppressed; frequently had preceding or concomitant cytomegalovirus infections; and two of three had a rapidly fatal course. The older patients presented an average of 5 years after transplantation while on maintenance immunosuppressive drugs; in two of three cases with an oropharyngeal tumor; and had a more indolent, but frequently fatal, clinical course. The most frequent sites of biopsy-proven involvement in these patients were lymph nodes (three), the oropharynx (three), liver (three), bone marrow (three), transplanted kidney (three), colon (two), and central nervous system (two). EBV-specific antibody titers including anti-viral capsid antigen IgG, anti-viral capsid antigen IgM, anti-early antigen, and anti-Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen were serially measured in all patients. Four patients demonstrated serological evidence of a primary (one) or reactivation (three) EBV infection. No patient had significant changes in anti-early antigen or anti-Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen titers. All three patients tested for oropharyngeal shedding of EBV were positive. A touch imprint of one tumor was stained for the presence of Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen, and a majority of cells were positive. EBV complementary RNA/DNA filter hybridization and/or viral DNA/DNA reassociation analysis performed on tumor biopsy specimens in five patients demonstrated multiple EBV genome equivalents per cell in all eight specimens tested. Clinical, pathological, serological, and molecular hybridization studies provide substantial evidence that EBV was the cause of these lymphoproliferative disorders occurring after renal transplantation. Impaired host defenses allow the EBV-transformed B-lymphocytes to escape normal control mechanisms. This impairment is invariable and influenced by many factors resulting in the observed spectrum of disease. Cytogenetic changes, however, may also be important.
Cancer
Res 1981 Nov
PMID:Clinical spectrum of lymphoproliferative disorders in renal transplant recipients and evidence for the role of Epstein-Barr virus. 627 71
Drug-induced agranulocytosis may be type I (involving the drug, antibodies and neutrophils), type II (associated with accumulated drug toxicity in hypersensitive persons), or type III (representing different etiologies induced by immune and toxic mechanisms). The pyrazolones (amidopyrine, dipyrone and butazones), phenothiazine derivatives, antithyroid drugs, and antibiotics are thought to be causative agents in agranulocytosis. The symptoms may involve sudden onset of high fever,
sore throat
with ulcerative angina, or stomatitis. Diagnosis of agranulocytosis is confirmed by severe granulocytopenia (0-0.5 X 10(9)/l), but bone marrow examination is required to rule out aplastic anemia and
cancer
. Treatment of drug-induced agranulocytosis involves immediate withdrawal of the incriminated drug. In most patients, granulocyte, reticulocyte, and thrombocyte cell counts overshoot in the regenerative phase of drug-induced agranulocytosis.
...
PMID:Hematologic effects of antipyretic analgesics. Drug-induced agranulocytosis. 635 69
A retrospective analysis of direct laryngoscopies performed at our institution in 1978 was undertaken utilizing computer technology. The population which consisted of 54% males and 46% females had an average age of 50.4 years. The most common symptom was hoarseness (83.6%). The most frequent benign and malignant diagnoses were vocal cord polyp and squamous cell carcinoma, respectively. Males predominated in all disease entities except vocal cord polyps. Benign disease entities presented most frequently with one or two symptoms, while malignant pathology presented with a varied array and number of symptoms. The indications: "tumor" seen on indirect laryngoscopy,
sore throat
, dysphagia, otalgia, upper respiratory tract obstruction, hemoptysis, cough and leukoplakia were most frequently associated with
malignancy
. Voice abuse occupations were most commonly associated with vocal cord polyps and tobacco and alcohol use was most frequently associated with laryngeal cancer. Eighty-five percent of direct laryngoscopies were done under general anesthesia with two-thirds utilizing direct suspension microlaryngoscopy.
...
PMID:Direct laryngoscopy: a retrospective analysis. 666 56
The late presentation of head and neck
malignancies
is often attributable to failure by the patient and the doctors to appreciate the significance of early symptoms. The presenting features of 522 cases are summarised. They emphasize that the following clinical features are significant, especially in a patient who smokes or drinks: local pain, pain referred to the ear, hoarseness, dysphagia, dyspnoea and stridor, persistent
sore throat
, nasal obstruction, bleeding, problems fitting dentures and a neck lump. An adequate history and ability to examine the head and neck region are prerequisites to early diagnosis. A knowledge of the presenting features of head and neck
malignancies
could be stressed more adequately by public health authorities.
...
PMID:The presenting symptoms of head and neck cancer. 695 95
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