Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 77-year-old woman with primary esophageal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in clinical stage IEA (Ann Arbor Classification) developed pain and difficulty in swallowing. An upper gastrointestinal examination revealed a submucosal tumor from the upper to the middle portion of the esophagus. Histopathological examination at endoscopic biopsy with endoscopic partial incision showed non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (diffuse type--large cell). Immunohistological examination of tumor cells disclosed LCA (+), CD3(DAKO) (+), MT1 (+), UCHL1 (+), MB1 (+), MxPanB (-) and EMA (-) reactivity and showed T cell lymphoma. The clinical stage was determined to be IEA after further work-up. Improvement of swallowing difficulty and esophageal findings on upper gastrointestinal series were noted after modified CHOP therapy and radiotherapy (total 50 Gy).
...
PMID:Primary esophageal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 163 71

Chordomas are slowly growing malignant tumors arising from notochordal rests. They are occurring in adults (50 to 60 year old) and are mainly (85%) located in sacrococcygeal or spheno-occipital regions; other main localization is cervical spine. Chordomas are usually discovered in patients with pain or symptoms due to compression of surrounding viscera. Radiologically it is characterized by association of osteolysis and soft tissues opacity. On macroscopic examination tumoral tissue has mucoid appearance; under microscope it is made up with lobules of epithelial-appearing cells surrounded by acid mucosubstances. Tumorous cells contain glycogen and neutral mucosubstances. They are surrounded by argyrophilic rim due to pericellular condensation of intercellular matrix, well viewed on electron microscope examination. When their cytoplasm is filled with vacuoles, cells take up typical physaliphorous appearance. Chordomas cells express epithelial differentiation antigens (low molecular weight cytokeratins, EMA, CAM 52, HFM 62, even CEA), Vimentin and S-100 Protein: this triple positivity allow differentiation between chordomas and numerous others tumors. Correct treatment of chordoma is achieved with an initially complete excision. Local recurrences are frequent and sometimes inoperable: in this cases radiotherapy alone may be performed (70 grays). Sarcomas (fibroblastic or Malignant fibrous histiocytoma) may occur after radiotherapy or without it. Hematogenous metastasis occur in 10% to 15% of patients. Survival rate at five years is included between 50% and 75%. Chondroid chordoma is a special entity occurring in younger patients (35 year old) and located in spheno-occipital region. In addition to chordomas it contain chondroid (benign or malignant) islands. Mean survival rate (16 years) is far better than for chordoma or chondrosarcoma.
...
PMID:[Chordomas]. 329 77

A case of sacrococcygeal chordoma in a 9-year-old boy is presented. The symptoms at presentation were pain in both legs and sacrococcygeal region for the last two years that increased in the last four weeks irradiating mainly to the left leg. X-ray and CT scan examinations of the lumbar region revealed an expansive process in the coccygeal region with multiple calcifications and a partially eroded coccyx. There was no invasion of the retroperitoneum and regional lymph nodes. A biopsy was performed and showed cords and nests of cells with large cytoplasm, sometimes vacuolated, nuclei with moderate pleomorphism and clumped chromatin. Immunohistochemistry with avidin-biotin peroxidase technique showed positivity for CK, S-100 protein, CEA, vimentin and to EMA. Chordomas are a distinctly uncommon neoplasm in the first two decades of life, specially in the sacrococcygeal region. They have an aggressive behavior. Treatment of choice is complete resection.
...
PMID:Sacrococcygeal chordoma in a 9-year-old boy. 858 26

A case of adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) with polymorphous features and an unknown differential diagnosis was presented. It appeared, without any pain, in the right maxillary sinus of a 47 year-old man. A variety of histopathological patterns were found, including glandular, cribriform, tubular and solid ones. However, the typical features of ACC, such as cribriform pattern associated with pseudocyst and tubular formations were rather scarce. A single cell strand appearance, so-called "Indian file arrangement", and papillary cystic formation were also noted, which are often associated with polymorphous low-grade adenocarcinoma (PLGA). Immunohistochemistries of EMA, CEA and musclespecific actin showed also similar staining patterns to those of PLGA in some areas. Our case could not be regarded as PLGA; but this case with features of PLGA as well as those of ACC might suggest an entity of transitional type between ACC and PLGA.
...
PMID:Adenoid cystic carcinoma with morphological diversities--report of a case and discussion of the morphologic and immunohistochemical features. 893 98

Several studies of experimental and acute clinical pain have indicated reactive effects of self-assessment on pain intensity and tolerance. A recent study of chronic pain patients (vonBaeyer 1994), however, failed to show these effects. The present investigation sought to determine whether reactive effects can be produced in chronic pain patients by an intensive self-assessment protocol. Using the methodology of ecological momentary assessment (EMA; Stone and Shiffman 1994), thirty-five chronic rheumatoid arthritis patients completed diaries of pain and mood seven times a day for 1 wk. Eighteen patients were included in the final sample because they responded to at least half of the number of hourly prompts for each of the 7 days. Using repeated measures analysis of the daily means, no significant effects of time were found for any measures. Reactive effects that result in an average change in pain levels over time, therefore, do not appear to be produced by intensive self-assessment in a naturalistic context. Results are discussed in terms of cognitive and behavioral theories of pain reactivity.
Pain 1996 Oct
PMID:Reactive effects of diary self-assessment in chronic pain patients. 895 18

A case of mesothelioma with a small cell component in a 53-year-old, non-smoker woman. The patient had a history of asbestos exposure, and presented with thoracic pain. A total body computed tomogram showed a left pleural effusion and a 7.5-cm pleural mass. Thoracoscopy revealed a diffuse nodular thickening of the left parietal pleura, and a biopsy was performed. The patient died of the disease 4 months after diagnosis. Microscopically, the pleural neoplasm was composed of three different components: 40% of the tumor showed the classic histology of a malignant epithelial mesothelioma, 40% was composed of small- to medium-sized cells with open nuclear chromatin, evident nucleoli and high mitotic activity, and 20% of the neoplasm was indistinguishable from a small cell carcinoma. Immunohistochemically, the first component was diffusely and strongly positive for cytokeratin AE1/AE3, cytokeratin CAM 5.2 and EMA, focally positive for BER-EP4, and negative for CD15, B 72.3, CEA, LCA, chromogranin, synaptophysin, TTF-1 and CD99. The cells of the second component were positive only for cytokeratin AE1/AE3 and cytokeratin CAM 5.2, and the elements of the third component were negative for all the antibodies tested. Pleural mesothelioma with a small cell component is rare. The most useful parameters to distinguish it from other small cell malignancies that may involve the pleura, particularly small cell carcinoma of pulmonary origin, are discussed.
...
PMID:[Small-cell mesothelioma of the pleura: description of a case]. 1241 72

A 75-year-old man was admitted because of right knee joint pain in December 1999. He had suffered from acute myelocytic leukemia (AML: M0) in November 1994 and achieved the first complete remission (CR) then. His AML relapsed in August 1996, but fortunately he achieved a second CR. Radiographical bone examination revealed osteolytic lesions in his right knee and bone scintigraphy showed uptake in the right knee and the middle part of the left femur. MRI also revealed a low attenuation signal in the left femur. He had no abnormal findings in peripheral blood or bone marrow. Histological examination of the biopsied bone tissue showed a diffuse proliferation of round cells with medium-sized or large nuclei. These cells were histochemistrically negative for myeloperoxidase and naphtol-ASD-chloroacetate esterase, and were also negative for lysozyme, cytokeratin 7, 9, 20, EMA, CEA, CD3, CD79a on immunohistochemistry, but were positive for CD43, CD56. In immunophenotypic analysis of these cells by flow cytometry, CD7, CD13, CD33, CD41, CD56 were revealed to be strongly positive. On the basis of these findings we diagnosed these tumors as granulocytic sarcomas (GS), extramedullary recurrence of AML M7. Although radiation (36Gy) to these tumors brought a temporary relief of the pain, he died of systemic relapse of AML in February 2001. When presented CD7+ AML M0 had been diagnosed, but GS cells were also positive for CD 56 and CD41. Although CD56 had not been examined initially, he might have been had myeloid/NK cell precursor acute leukemia and CD41 might be acquired later in the course of the disease. It is known that AML M0, M7 and myeloid/NK cell precursor acute leukemia have poor prognoses, nevertheless he survived for 6 years. It may be that intensive and repeated chemotherapy for AML can obtain excellent outcome in the elderly cases in good systemic condition and with favourable prognostic factors.
...
PMID:[Acute myelocytic leukemia (M0) in an elderly patient with relapsed granulocytic sarcoma (M7) of bone during the second period of complete remission 5 years after onset]. 1270 54

Angiosarcoma occurs very rarely in the intestinal tract as either a primary or metastatic malignancy and can present great diagnostic difficulty, especially when it displays epithelioid cytomorphology. Since only isolated case reports have been published, the purpose of this study is to more fully delineate the histopathological and clinical features from a series of 8 angiosarcomas involving the gastrointestinal tract. There were 5 male and 3 female patients whose ages ranged from 25-85 years (median 57). Presenting symptoms included intestinal bleeding, anemia and pain. Five cases involved the small bowel and 3 involved the colon/rectum. Four cases were primary to the intestinal tract, 2 patients initially presented with secondary involvement of the large bowel from occult retroperitoneal primaries, 1 patient presented with disseminated disease including small bowel involvement, and 1 case was metastatic from a breast primary. Seven cases were composed predominantly of sheets of malignant appearing epithelioid cells with subtle areas forming cleft-like spaces suggestive of vascular differentiation. Immunohistochemical studies revealed the lesional cells to be immunoreactive for CD31 (8/8), CD34 (8/8), Factor VIII (8/8), cytokeratins AE1/AE3 (7/8), cytokeratin 7 (2/8), Cam5.2/cytokeratin 8 (5/8), and cytokeratin 19 (5/8). Cytokeratin 20 was negative in all eight cases, which contrasts sharply with the characteristic positivity for cytokeratin 20 in virtually all intestinal carcinomas. One case was weakly and focally positive for EMA and all cases were negative for S-100 protein. Cytokeratin staining was variable and ranged from focal to extensive. Follow-up was available in eight cases and ranged from 1-33 months (median 12.5). Five patients died of disease, between 1 and 33 months (median 6) after diagnosis. One recently diagnosed patient is alive with disease 18 months after diagnosis, and one patient is free of disease 27 months after original diagnosis. Angiosarcomas of the gastrointestinal tract commonly display epithelioid cytomorphology, may be diffusely and strongly positive for cytokeratins and only show subtle signs of vascular differentiation, creating potential diagnostic confusion with primary or metastatic carcinoma. Given the clinically aggressive behavior of angiosarcoma, proper classification and treatment is important. Immunohistochemistry with vascular markers, CK20, and S-100 protein may be helpful in differentiating angiosarcoma from carcinoma and melanoma.
...
PMID:Angiosarcoma involving the gastrointestinal tract: a series of primary and metastatic cases. 1510 92

We report a primary retinal tumor with features of myxopapillary ependymoma. The lesion occurred in a 33-year-old man with a long history of phthisis bulbi and a more recent history of pain to the right eye. Enucleated ocular globe revealed a lesion occupying most of the retinal surface. Histologically, the retina was replaced by a tumor composed of spindle cells with fibrillary cytoplasm and round to ovoid nuclei forming fascicles, perivascular pseudorosettes, microcysts, and deposition of extracellular mucins. Calcifications, metaplastic bone, and lymphoplasmacytic inflammatory infiltrate were also seen. Tumor cells expressed GFAP and S-100 and to lesser extent carbonic anhydrase II. The immunoreaction for EMA showed diffuse granular positivity, decorated a few extracellular lumina, and highlighted intracytoplasmic lumina in a few cells. Ultrastructurally, there was accumulation of extracellular material between cells and around capillaries, long interdigitating cytoplasmic processes, extracellular lumina packed with microvilli, a few junctions evident around lumina, and some ciliary basal bodies and ciliary basal rootlets. As control cases, we also investigated expression of EMA and carbonic anhydrase II in an ocular globe with retinal gliosis and three cases of myxopapillary ependymoma of the cauda equina. The lesion described here represents the first example of retinal tumor with features of myxopapillary ependymoma. Pathologic features and particularly expression of carbonic anhydrase II suggest a derivation from intrinsic glial cells of retina otherwise known as Muller cells.
...
PMID:Primary glial tumor of the retina with features of myxopapillary ependymoma. 1616 Apr 86

An 83-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of colicky pain under the right costal arch suggesting cholecystitis. Physical examination confirmed by ultrasound scan indicated a palpable tumor in that location. Laparotomy was performed and the tumor was removed. Histopathological examination revealed malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) originating in neurofibroma of the mesentery. Macroscopic, histological and cytological features were typical for MPNST. High nuclear pleomorphism, hyperchromasia were observed but on average only two mitotic figures per high power field were seen. The growth fraction determined by Ki-67 immunoreactivity was about 30%. Immunohistochemical stains revealed positivity of individual cells for NK-1(CD57), S-100 protein and NSE. It was lack of positivity for cytokeratin, EMA, vimentin, desmin, SMA, CD34. We report a well documented case of MPNST originating in preexisting neurofibroma of the mesentery. To our knowledge, is the first case in the Polish literature.
...
PMID:Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor originating in neurofibroma of the mesentery. Case report. 1633 83


1 2 3 4 Next >>