Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (ureter)
9,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We describe a patient with displacement of both ureters to the right side caused by a liposarcoma. The left ureter was displaced beyond the right ureter. The risk of intraoperative trauma to the ureter could be minimized by preoperative placement of ureteral stents.
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PMID:Maximal displacement of the ureter by a liposarcoma. 871 73

An 86-year-old woman with a previous excision of a large retroperitoneal low-grade liposarcoma presented with a 4-month history of persistent left flank discomfort. Workup revealed left hydronephrosis secondary to obstruction, which was caused by a recurrent liposarcoma in the intraluminal ureter. She underwent a left nephroureterectomy for symptomatic palliation. Pathologic study revealed high-grade liposarcoma. Despite negative surgical margins, the tumor rapidly recurred, leading to death only 4 months after surgery. This case highlights the aggressive nature of liposarcoma.
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PMID:Liposarcoma presenting as an intraluminal ureteral mass. 1273 39

The occurrence in the same young patient of three synchronous tumors deriving from different embryogenic tissues and without a clear correlation with a common etiopathogenic factor is very unusual. We report a case of a Caucasian woman submitted to wide resection of a large retroperitoneal liposarcoma and right radical nephrectomy for suspected tumor infiltration. Histological examination of the right ureter and renal pelvis showed the presence of a multifocal urothelial carcinoma that was clinically asymptomatic. Two months later, during follow-up, chest X-ray and computed tomography documented a coin lesion of the upper left lung, confirmed by positron emission tomography. This nodule was surgically removed and examined histologically, resulting in a diagnosis of sclerosing hemangioma. The patient is alive without evidence of recurrent disease.
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PMID:An unusual case of three synchronous tumors in a young woman. 1620 54

Inflammatory liposarcoma is a rare variant of a well-differentiated liposarcoma (WDLPS). We present a case of a 37 years old male who had a giant variety of this inflammatory WDLPS. CT scan revealed a large abdomino-pelvic mass abutting the left kidney and pushing the IVC, Aorta and the left ureter across the midline. CT guided FNAC did not reveal any malignant cells. A large 9-kg fibro-fatty mass, which appeared irregular, congested and bosillated was excised. Microscopic picture revealed foci of fibrosis with mature adipose tissue. Lymphocyte and plasma cell infiltrate was abundant along with multi-nucleate giant cells and few lipoblasts. There are no case reports of a giant inflammatory variant of WD-LPS in world literature and this is the first of its kind from the Indian sub-continent. We present a case report of this rare giant variant of inflammatory WDLPS and discuss the review of literature.
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PMID:Inflammatory variant of a well-differentiated retroperitoneal liposarcoma: case report of a rare giant variety. 1676 61

Percutaneous CT-guided radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is becoming more and more established in the treatment of various neoplasms, including retroperitoneal tumors of the kidneys and the adrenal glands. We report the case of RFA in a patient suffering from the third relapse of a retroperitoneal liposarcoma in the left psoas muscle. After repeated surgical resection and supportive radiation therapy of a primary retroperitoneal liposarcoma and two surgically treated recurrences, including replacement of the ureter by a fraction of the ileum, there was no option for further surgery. Thus, we considered RFA as the most suitable treatment option. Monopolar RFA was performed in a single session with a 2-cm umbrella-shaped LeVeen probe. During a 27-month follow-up period the patient remained free of tumor.
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PMID:Percutaneous radiofrequency ablation for treatment of recurrent retroperitoneal liposarcoma. 1817 76

The objective of this study is to evaluate the use of ultrasound in the initial evaluation of renal colic. We studied prospectively 21 patients referred for radiographic evaluation for renal colic from January 1998 through April 1998. All sonographic studies were performed with real-time sector scanner (Kertz, Compeson 410 using 3.5 MHz Probe). Our sonographic criteria for a positive examination consisted of the visualization of urinary tract calculus and/or unilateral hydronephrosis with or without ureterectasis. The presence of urinary calculi was proven in 18 out of 21 patients (85%). The absence of calculi was established in three cases either by negative I.V.U. (2 cases) or by the clinical and sonographic demonstration of epididymitis as the cause in one patient. In the 18 patients with proven urinary calculi, ultrasound correctly identified the diagnosis in 15 cases (83%). Of those 15 visualized calculi, 11 were located at the ureterovesicular junction, two in the renal pelvis, one in the proximal third of the ureter, and one in the distal third. The sensitivity of ultasonography to detect renal calculi was 83% and the specificity, 100%. The one false positive examination with unilateral hydronephrosis proved to be due to a retroperitoneal liposarcoma. There were two cases in which the urinary tract ultrasound examination was negative. We conclude that ultrasound has a high diagnostic value when used as the first line investigation for the initial evaluation of renal colic.
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PMID:The role of ultrasound in initial evaluation of renal colic. 1820 12

Retroperitoneal liposarcoma is rare. Here we describe a case of retroperitoneal liposarcoma in a 61-year-old male. Preoperative computed tomography revealed an intraabdominal huge mass, and a clinical diagnosis of liposarcoma. Intraoperatively, the mass involved the right kidney and bladder, completely surrounding the right ureter. The tumor and the lower half ureter were removed. Successful reconstruction of a neoureter was performed with the Boari flap coupled with nephropexy and a psoas hitch. The detailed salient steps performed in this case are reported, together with a review of the literature.
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PMID:[Retroperitoneal liposarcoma surgically repaired with Boari flap]. 1922 6

Due to the late onset of symptoms, retroperitoneal liposarcoma are often diagnosed in advanced stages when adjacent organs have been infiltrated and the tumours have reached extensive sizes. Surgery remains the first choice of therapy. We report on the primary resection of a 45-kg liposarcoma that was removed en-bloc including the left kidney and descending colon with -tumour-free margins. Nine months later, the follow-up revealed a right-sided recurrence of the tumour, which was surgically removed including the right ureter. Since then, the patient has been without any signs of tumour recurrence or metastases. This report demonstrates that even extreme-ly large tumours can be removed safely and that the size is not a contraindication for primary surgical treatment. Local recurrence is common as seen in our case, and occurs even after R0 resection up to 10 years after the first operation. Recurrences should be surgically removed as this is the only treatment which has been shown to increase survival in even R1 and R2 situations.
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PMID:[Case report--surgical therapy of a retroperitoneal liposarcoma weighing 45 kg]. 1929 18

A dedifferentiated liposarcoma of the retroperitoneum is an extremely rare tumor. A 51-year old man was admitted to our department because a retroperitoneal mass was seen on abdominal computed tomography at another hospital. Computed tomography of the abdomen and magnetic resonance imaging showed a large pelvic mass located in the right hemipelvis, and it was pushing the right ureter and invading the right kidney, duodenum, colon and inferior vena cava. The patient underwent right radical nephrectomy, pylorus preserving pancreatoduodenectomy, right hemicolectomy and artificial blood vessel replacement for the inferior vena cava. The histopathological diagnosis was dedifferentiated liposarcoma and the patient was free from recurrence on the computed tomography that was done 6 months after the operation.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma of the retroperitoneum. 2036 54

A 72-year-old male visited a local hospital on presentation of melena. Colonoscopy revealed a protruded lesion in the ascending colon, and computed tomography revealed a 20 cm retroperitoneal tumor. Biopsy failed to provide a definitive diagnosis of the colonic lesion. He was diagnosed as having a retroperitoneal liposarcoma and an ascending colon tumor using computed tomography, and referred to our hospital. Biopsy of the ascending colon lesion showed spindle cells with fibrosis. On immunohistochemical staining, tumor cells were positive for cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and murine double minute 2, and the lesion was diagnosed as a well-differentiated or dedifferentiated liposarcoma. The retroperitoneal liposarcoma, which had infiltrated the ascending colon, was resected along with the right colon and the right kidney. Macroscopically, the tumor had infiltrated the ascending colon, forming a multinodular solid mass in the lumen and the right kidney. Microscopic finding of the main tumor revealed a well-differentiated liposarcoma, and that of the colonic lesion revealed a dedifferentiated liposarcoma with nuclei of different sizes and shapes and increased spindle cell morphology. The right kidney and ureter were surrounded by tumor cells but were not infiltrated, and there was no lymph node involvement. The diagnosis of retroperitoneal liposarcoma is often difficult because symptoms appear only after the tumor becomes very large. Some retroperitoneal liposarcomas are found on computed tomography by chance. The clinical course of this case was very rare because of the presentation of melena as the first symptom and the detection of an invasive mass in the ascending colon using colonoscopy.
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PMID:Retroperitoneal liposarcoma with colonic involvement: a case report. 2455 26


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