Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (prostate cancer)
59,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two cases of prostatic cancer with single bone metastasis in the tibia are discussed. The intense uniform involvement of a solitary limb bone with high perfusion and blood pool activity in the 3-phase bone scan and the positive white blood cell scan (observed in one case) were not typical for a metastatic bone lesion. Conventional radiomorphology--lamellar, periosteal reaction, disseminated medullar sclerosis, no localized lesion--also led to other differential considerations such as osteomyelitis and malignant lymphoma, which could not be specified by CT and MRI. Even if there is no typical morphology in scintigraphic and radiologic imaging, biopsy should be performed to exclude bone metastasis in prostatic cancer.
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PMID:[Atypical bone metastases in prostate cancer]. 187 83

Thirteen patients with confirmed Paget's disease were examined using a 1.5 T MR tomograph. Five patients had polyostotic and eight patients monostotic forms of the disease. The results of these MR examinations were compared with the results of MR examinations performed on patients with osseous changes of different origin (metastases of breast cancer and prostate cancer, osteomyelitis, bone marrow infiltration due to acute lymphatic leukaemia and plasmocytoma). MR tomography permits evaluation of bone marrow space, osseous changes, and the surrounding soft tissue. Areas of sclerotic bone, thickened corticalis and bands of connective tissue in the marrow space were recognised as structures with no signal in T1- and T2-weighted images. The red and yellow marrows showed normal signal intensity patterns, although they were often reduced in size.
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PMID:[Paget's disease of bone: MR characteristics at 1.5 T]. 284 58

The microstructure of reactive endosteal new bone was examined using undecalcified ground sections in five pathologic conditions (bone metastasis from prostate cancer in seven cases, intervertebral osteochondrosis in five, Paget disease in four, chronic suppurative osteomyelitis in two, and fracture healing in one). To determine a basic form of rapid intramembranous bone formation, fetal rat calvaria and primitive bones made in clonal osteogenic cell culture were also observed. In slow bone-forming conditions, lamellar new bone was deposited on pre-existing trabecular surface and caused trabecular thickening on radiographs. In contrast, in rapid bone-forming conditions, woven bone was deposited as spicules extending from trabecular surface so as to form new networks in intertrabecular space. This causes obscurity of trabecular margins radiographically. Reactive endosteal bone formation may be nonspecific and have a significance for assessing the virulence of underlying pathologic conditions like periosteal reactions.
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PMID:Reactive endosteal bone formation. 312 28

The following case of a male patient with a history of prostate cancer suffering from pain and swelling in the right mandibular area illustrates the well-known diagnostic problem of a superinfected tumor. Orthopan tomography and CT showed no defects in bone structure or smooth tissue. Whole-body bone scanning showed increased tracer uptake in the mandibular bone and in several other locations in the skeletal system. Antigranulocyte immunoscintigraphy showed increased uptake over the right mandible, whereas the other metastatic sites were visualized as cold spots. A second CT scan depicted a sclerotic lesion with surrounding periostal reaction and soft-tissue swelling and was interpreted as osteomyelitis. Therefore, clinical symptoms, bone scanning, antigranulocyte immunoscintigraphy and follow-up CT resulted in a diagnosis of osteomyelitis, although open needle biopsy revealed the lesion to be prostate cancer metastasis with massive leukocytic invasion.
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PMID:Bone metastasis with superimposed osteomyelitis in prostate cancer. 868 33

We report three cases of iatrogenically induced vertebral osteomyelitis due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. One case was a post-nucleotomy and post-operative complication of herniated disk treatment, one was related to infection of an epidural catheter in a patient suffering from rheumatoid arthritis and the third followed urinary investigation in a patient with prostate cancer. Infection was cured in all patients with antibiotic treatment. These case reports shed light on the possibility of infections with pseudomonas aeruginosa, in addition to the more common infections such as by staphylococci, especially following iatrogenic maneuvers.
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PMID:Iatrogenically induced vertebral osteomyelitis due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 873 27

In a 12-month period, metastatic cancer was diagnosed in eight patients. Six of them presented with pain mimicking toothache, temporomandibular joint disorders or trigeminal neuralgia, while two showed osteopenic bone lesions in the panoramic radiography, and perimandibular swelling. Anesthesia of the lower lip was the only common clinical feature. In seven of the eight patients, a whole body bone scintigraphy and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) of the skull in combination with a whole body and SPECT anti-granulocyte (Tc-99m MAK 250/183) bone marrow scintigraphy was performed. One patient did not have combined scintigraphy performed secondary to severe systemic illness. In six of the seven, the results were conclusive for a metastatic bone lesion. Biopsies confirmed three patients to have a previously unrecognized primary cancer, one patient to have previously unrecognized recurrent cancer, and three patients to exhibit new metastatic spread of an already diagnosed cancer. Histology revealed breast, lung, renal cancer and a malignancy of inconclusive origin. In the remaining patient, combined scintigraphy suggested osteomyelitis, yet biopsy revealed a prostate cancer metastasis with acute inflammatory cell infiltration. Thus, the scintigraphy pattern of a hot spot in the bone scan and a cold lesion in the bone marrow scintigraphy is highly suggestive of a mandibular metastasis, if accompanied by anesthesia of the lower lip.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations and diagnostic approach to metastatic cancer of the mandible. 932 88

The oncophilic complex of technetium-99m labeled pentavalent dimercaptosuccinic acid (99mTc(V)-DMSA) has been successfully used for the detection of primary and metastatic medullary thyroid cancer and for imaging various soft tissue tumors like lung, brain and prostate cancer. In this article, the role of 99mTc(V)-DMSA in the diagnosis of the primary tumor and metastases of osteosarcoma patients as compared to the 99mTc-MDP scan and the CT scan was studied. Twenty-eight patients with bone disease were referred to the Nuclear Medicine Department of Saint Savas Oncology Hospital in Athens from the Orthopedics Department of the same Hospital. From them, 18 (Group A) had osteosarcoma, 7 (Group B) osteomyelitis and 3 (Group C) bone fractures. The final diagnosis was made after fine needle aspiration biopsy. All patients were subjected to the 99mTc(V)-DMSA scan, the standard bone scan (99mTc-MDP) and CT scan. Group A patients showed a selective uptake of 99mTc(V)-DMSA in the primary tumor region. No abnormal 99mTc(V)-DMSA uptake was observed in the patients of Groups B and C. The 99mTc(V)-DMSA scan was found to be superior to the 99mTc-MDP and the CT scans in identifying metastases of osteosarcoma. Sensitivity was 100%, 86% and 98% respectively.
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PMID:The role of 99mTc(V)-DMSA scan as compared to 99mTc-MDP and CT scans in imaging the primary tumor and metastases of osteosarcoma. 1933 Jan 92

Bisphosphonates (BP),were initially used in industry and later as a drug due to their great affinity to osseous tissue, because of their powerful antiresorptive effect as a treatment in various osteopathies, such as osteoporosis, Paget disease or hypercalcemia associated with some malignant tumors, as myeloma or breast cancer. They are administered orally or intravenously, and although well tolerated, the most frequent side effects are gastrointestinal, in addition to osteonecrosis when they are administered via endovenous. The aim of this work has been to evaluate the existing publications in accredited scientific literature on biphosphonates and their action mechanism and the relationship with the appearance of osteonecrosis of the jaws. Although the mechanism by which osteonecrosis of the jaws develops is not known exactly, there seems to be influence by osteoclast inhibiton, antiangiogenic action, an inhibitory effect on the cellular cycle by the keratinocytes, as well as, reinforcement of the chemiotoxic action in oncological patients treated with other drugs. Clinically, it ranges from a non-specificity of symptoms to lesions such as osteomyelitis with necrosis and osseous sequesters that may be accompanied by fetor ex oris, with the appearance of many Actinomyces contaminated lesions. As for published antecedents on osteonecrosis due to bisphosphonate treatment found until 2006: 46.5% had a previous diagnosis of multiple myeloma; 38.8% were patients with metastatic breast cancer; 6.2% patients of metastatic prostate cancer; 4.1% suffered from osteoporosis; 3.5% from other metastatic diseases and 0.8% had Paget disease. The drugs that seem to have the highest incidence of osteochemionecrosis are: zoledronate, pamidronate, alendronate, risendronate and ibandronate, from the greatest to the least. Additionally, the risk of osteonecrosis being produced is accumulative and may reach 21% in the third year of intravenous bisphosphonate use.
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PMID:Osteochemonecrosis of the jaws due to bisphosphonate treatments. Update. 1911 48

A 74-year-old man visited our hospital, because of high prostate specific antigen (PSA). Retropubic radical prostatectomy was performed for prostatic cancer. Suddenly right inguinal lesion pain appeared at 25 days after operation with disturbance of gait. Pelvic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated inflammatory change in right pubic bone, pectineal muscle, adductor muscle, which suggested the diagnosis of osteomyelitis of the pubis. After long-term administration of antibiotic therapy, osteomyelitis of the symphysis pubis and gait possible. There was no recurrence of osteomyelitis of the symphysis pubis at one year after operation. In addition to our case, we review the 8 cases of osteomyelitis of the pubis after radical prostatectomy previously reported in Japanese publications.
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PMID:[A case of osteomyelitis of the pubis after radical prostatectomy: a case report]. 1976 42

Transrectal ultrasound-guided needle biopsy of the prostate (TRUS) is a well-tolerated and standardized procedure for the diagnosis of prostate cancer. Complications associated with TRUS requiring emergency room visits or hospital admissions are relatively low and include complications, such as a 1% risk of urinary retention and less than 1% chance of bacterial sepsis. Vertebral osteomyelitis is a rare complication of TRUS; there are 3 reported cases. Vertebral osteomyelitis has an insidious onset and usually resolves following medical intervention. We present an extremely rare case of vertebral osteomyelitis following TRUS, its clinical outcome and management.
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PMID:Vertebral osteomyelitis following transrectal ultrasound-guided biopsy of the prostate. 2239 78


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