Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (metastatic melanoma)
6,224 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronic encapsulated intracerebral hematoma is a rare clinicopathological entity. The authors reported a case of a 52-year-old male who presented with progressive sensory disturbance of the left extremities three weeks prior to admission. Plain CT and MRI scans revealed a subcortical mass in the right temporal lobe associated with extensive peritumoral edema and intratumoral hemorrhage (mixed intensity on T1WI, low intensity on T2WI). There was a ring-like enhancement with GdDTPA. These findings strongly suggested metastatic melanoma associated with intratumoral hemorrhage. During the operation, the mass appeared partly at the surface of the brain and was easily extirpated totally. Histologically, the specimen showed chronic encapsulated hematoma with a thick, fibrous capsule and there was no evidence of neoplasm. The postoperative course was uneventful and follow up CT scan showed disappearance of the mass and the surrounding edema. The relevant literature was reviewed, and the pathogenesis of this entity was discussed.
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PMID:[A case report of chronic encapsulated intracerebral hematoma]. 869 78

To correlate the findings on MRI with histopathology of metastatic melanoma, MRI was performed on 29 patients with 36 lesions, using spin-echo and inversion recovery sequences. Histopathologic examination of lesions was performed within 4 weeks of imaging. Lesions were categorized according to cell type and were also evaluated for the presence and extent of melanin, iron, and necrosis. These data were then correlated with the signal intensities of the lesions. Enhancement of lesions after injection of intravenous gadolinium was calculated and correlated to vascularity of the tumor. Melanin was present more frequently in lesions appearing hyperintense or with mixed signal intensity (12/15) than in those appearing hypo- or isointense (6/21) on the T1-weighted sequence. This trend was significant (P = .013). Also, more lesions appearing mixed, ie, having both hypo- and hyperintense components, contained melanin (15/23), as opposed to lesions that appeared to be only hyperintense (3/13) on the STIR sequence. There was no clear association between signal intensity and melanin content on the T2-weighted sequence. There was no significant association between the signal intensities on the MR images and the iron content, tumor size, or tumor cell type of these lesions. There was no clear association between enhancement after gadolinium injection and vascularity, as assessed by histology. The authors concluded in this study that T1 shortening and hypointensity on the STIR sequence seen in patients with metastatic melanoma are most closely related to the melanin content of the tumor.
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PMID:Metastatic melanoma: correlation of MRI characteristics and histopathology. 885 27

We report a case of histologically verified melanoma of the nose which presented 2 years after initial radiotherapy with left temporomandibular pain, dysfunction and dental sepsis. Conventional radiography revealed a partially dentate mandible with a destructive lesion involving the left condyle, an ill-defined lesion in the right retromolar region and chronic inflammatory apical root lesions. Since MRI of the nose was done at the initial presentation, it was postulated that MRI could be used to characterize the destructive jaw lesions. The MR features were similar to the original nasal lesion and accepted as proof of diagnosis of metastatic melanoma. A literature review reveals only 37 previous cases of metastasis to the temporomandibular joint with none of involvement by melanoma. The role of MRI in the diagnosis of this lesion is also described for the first time.
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PMID:Case report. Magnetic resonance features of metastatic melanoma of the temporomandibular joint and mandible. 916 Nov 85

The use of and transoesophageal echocardiography has been well described in the diagnosis of intracardiac metastases. We present a case of a right atrial mass in a patient with metastatic melanoma which was unexpectedly detected by dynamic enhanced spiral CT. The diagnosis was subsequently confirmed by MRI. It is likely that the increasingly widespread use of spiral CT will result in a greater detection rate of intracardiac tumours.
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PMID:Right atrial metastatic melanoma detected by dynamic contrast enhanced spiral CT. 1047 3

MRI findings of 13 patients with soft tissue tumors (STT) are presented. There are were abnormalities, such as primary STTs of the hip in 5 patients, the back in 1, and the neck in 1, STT relapses of the hip in 2 and those of the back in 1. Two patients had chronic hip STT hematomas and 1 had hip STT metastatic melanoma. The diagnosis was verified in 11 cases (in 10 cases at surgery and 1 at needle biopsy). MRI makes it possible to define the accurate sizes of the tumor, its structure and relationship to its adjacent tissues, which is important in choosing at treatment policy, the type and scope of a surgical interventions.
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PMID:[MRI diagnosis of soft tissue tumors]. 1071 30

Melanoma frequently metastasizes to the central nervous system (CNS). The diagnosis of CNS metastases typically is made following the onset of clinical symptoms. Thus, more sensitive diagnostic approaches are needed to identify subclinical CNS metastases. Currently, standard cytologic analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is limited by its poor sensitivity. A more sensitive assay was therefore developed using multiple reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) markers. CSF was collected and assessed by RT-PCR for three known melanoma-associated markers (MAGE-3, MART-1, and tyrosinase) to detect occult metastatic melanoma cells in the CSF of 37 American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stage IV melanoma patients. Cytologic analysis of CSF was performed on all patients, and immunohistochemistry (IHC) analysis was performed on 33 CSF samples using anti-S100 and anti-HMB-45 antibodies. Only one patient (3%) had tumor-positive CSF cytology and IHC upon entry into the study, whereas 12 patients (32%) were positive for at least one RT-PCR marker. The correlation between CSF RT-PCR positivity of MART-1 and/or MAGE-3 and the development of CNS metastases at 3 mo was significant (p = 0.04). Fifteen of 37 patients (41%) had either positive MRI and/or positive RT-PCR results. Multimarker RT-PCR is more informative and sensitive than cytology/IHC in assessing the CSF of melanoma patients.
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PMID:Molecular detection of metastatic melanoma cells in cerebrospinal fluid in melanoma patients. 1151 19

Patient management and treatment strategies for metastatic melanoma depend largely on the stage of metastatic disease. The aim of this study was to compare contrast-enhanced whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (wbMRI) and whole-body computed tomography (wbCT) to detect distant metastases for staging. A total of 43 patients (41 with completed wbCT and wbMRI examination) with known American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stage III-IV malignant melanoma were examined and 775 metastases were identified by both methods. Whole-body CT was able to detect 522 metastases, whereas wbMRI found 730 metastases. Whole-body CT identified 188 pulmonary metastases, compared with 143 metastases detected by wbMRI. In kidneys, adrenal glands and lymph nodes, respectively, wbCT and wbMRI detected the same number of lesions. Whole-body MRI detected more metastases than wbCT in liver (detection rate 122/199), spleen (26/54), subcutaneous tissue (39/61), muscle (4/11), bone marrow (23/132) and brain (15/25). Therapy was modified as a consequence of wbMRI findings in 10/41 (24%) patients. In conclusion, wbMRI detected clearly more malignant melanoma metastases in most organ systems with the exception of lung metastases. More accurate and complete staging by wbMRI has an impact on treatment strategy in about one-quarter of the patients.
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PMID:Prospective comparison of the impact on treatment decisions of whole-body magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography in patients with metastatic malignant melanoma. 1636 31

A 63-year-old woman with diplopia and bilateral ptosis underwent brain MRI that showed a pituitary mass with signal characteristics suggestive of adenoma. Within one week she had developed nearly complete bilateral ophthalmoplegia. A repeat MRI showed extension of the mass into both cavernous sinuses. Hypophysectomy disclosed an amelanotic melanoma. Extensive search for a primary source was unsuccessful. Despite local radiation treatment, the tumor continued to grow and the patient became blind and died within several months of diagnosis. There are seven reported cases of melanoma arising primarily in the sella turcica. Two cases of metastatic melanoma to the cavernous sinuses have been reported. Amelanotic melanoma has not been reported as a cause of cavernous sinus syndrome.
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PMID:Rapidly progressive bilateral ophthalmoplegia and enlarging sellar mass caused by amelanotic melanoma. 1651 68

Pancreatic metastasis of malignant melanoma is rarely diagnosed while the patient is alive. We report a case of metastatic melanoma of the pancreas in a 35-year-old woman presenting with a solid mass of the pancreas. Her past medical history included a radical hysterectomy 2 years previously for malignant melanoma of the vagina. Twelve months later, lung metastasis was also resected. EUS-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) identified that the pancreatic tumor was histologically and immunohistochemically identical to the surgical specimen of her lung neoplasm. Imaging studies including US, CT, and MRI have limited value to distinguish the tumors from primary ductal adenocarcinoma. EUS-FNA can provide tissue diagnosis from pancreatic masses, specifically when other modalities have failed.
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PMID:[Pancreatic metastasis of malignant melanoma diagnosed by EUS-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA)]. 1761 86

Noninvasive or minimally invasive prediction of tumor metastatic potential would facilitate individualized cancer management. Studies were performed on a panel of human melanoma xenografts that spanned the full range of metastatic potential measured by an in vivo lung colony assay and an in vitro membrane invasion culture system. Three imaging methods potentially transferable to the clinic [dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI, T(1(rho))-MRI, and low-temperature fluorescence imaging (measurable on biopsy specimens)] distinguished between relatively less metastatic and more metastatic human melanoma xenografts in nude mice. DCE-MRI, analyzed with the shutter-speed relaxometric algorithm and using an arterial input function simultaneously measured in the left ventricle of the mouse heart, yielded a blood transfer rate constant, K(trans), that measures vascular perfusion/permeability. K(trans) was significantly higher in the core of the least metastatic melanoma (A375P) than in the core of the most metastatic melanoma (C8161). C8161 melanoma had more blood vascular structures but fewer functional blood vessels than A375P melanoma. The A375P melanoma exhibited mean T(1(rho)) values that were significantly higher than those of C8161 melanoma. Measurements of T(1) and T(2) relaxation times did not differ significantly between these 2 melanomas. The mitochondrial redox ratio, Fp/(Fp + NADH), where Fp and NADH are the fluorescences of oxidized flavoproteins and reduced pyridine nucleotides, respectively, varied linearly with the in vitro invasive potential of the 5 melanoma cell lines (A375P, A375M, A375P10, A375P5, and C8161). This study shows that a harsh microenvironment may promote melanoma metastasis and provides potential biomarkers of metastatic potential.
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PMID:Quantitative magnetic resonance and optical imaging biomarkers of melanoma metastatic potential. 1936 61


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