Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0476089 (endometrial cancer)
11,379 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a case in which plicae palmatae (a normal anatomical structure of the cervix) was demonstrated on MRI. A 33-year-old woman with endometrial cancer underwent a pre-operative MRI examination before total abdominal hysterectomy. Axial T2 weighted images through the cervix demonstrated a longitudinal line of distinct hypointensity confined to the cervical canal. Gross examination of the surgical specimen revealed a relatively large median longitudinal ridge, as well as shorter folds fanning out laterally and upward, which were clearly identifiable on the endocervical wall. The midline longitudinal ridge was considered to represent a portion of the plicae palmatae, which are folds on the anterior and posterior walls of the uterine cervical canal. On MRI, one should avoid misdiagnosing this line of hypointensity as a septate uterus.
...
PMID:Plicae palmatae of the cervical canal visualized on MRI. 1807 49

This report describes the evolving use of transabdominal ultrasound (TAUS) as an imaging tool to verify tandem placement, localize the treatment volume and aid conformal brachytherapy planning for both cervical and uterine corpus cancers. Two patients, one with cancer of the cervix and one with cancer of the endometrium, are used as examples to illustrate the advantages of using TAUS. TAUS is used to guide applicator insertion and check the applicator in the treatment position. The dimensions of the uterus are recorded. Brachytherapy isodose plans are generated based on these measurements. Confirmation of uterine dimensions and isodose coverage is obtained using MRI taken after the initial fraction of treatment has been delivered. We illustrate how TAUS is successfully used to correct and verify tandem placement after the patient has been moved from insertion to treatment position. We also show how to use TAUS for conformal planning, based on individually derived target dimensions. TAUS has successfully been used to conformally plan treatment to the uterus and cervix, minimizing brachytherapy-related toxicity to surrounding structures. Ultrasound is portable, inexpensive and simple to use and allows for accurate, conformal, reproducible and adaptive treatments.
...
PMID:Ultrasound-based conformal planning for gynaecological brachytherapy. 1837 32

In this article, we have reviewed the current role of PET/PET-computed tomography (CT) in the management of gynecological malignancies. The promise of this technique is becoming increasingly evident, based upon several studies conducted in these malignancies. 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose-PET appears to have a potential role in assessing response to treatment and forecasting prognosis. For cervical carcinoma, the modality has proven useful in both the staging of untreated advanced cervical cancer and restaging of the disease. Its role in prognostication of the disease and in detecting lesions in the setting of post-treatment unexplained tumor-marker elevation appears promising. PET is of great benefit as a diagnostic tool in ovarian carcinoma when there is an increase in serum CA-125 and CT/MRI or conventional imaging are inconclusive or negative. With regard to its role in endometrial carcinoma, its benefit is particularly emphasized in the setting of post-therapy surveillance of the disease, although, in a limited series, it also appears to give additional information in the pretreatment states. PET may be of value in detecting the extra-uterine lesions that are not visualized with CT/MRI. Data on the role of 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose-PET imaging in the management of vulvar and vaginal cancer are relatively sparse at this time but the modality appears to be of value in staging disease and is more effective than conventional diagnostic modalities with respect to detecting nodal metastasis in both malignancies.
...
PMID:PET and PET-CT imaging of gynecological malignancies: present role and future promise. 1910 9

Prognosis for endometrial carcinoma is closely related to cell type and tumor grade but also to local staging using the FIGO classification. MRI, under specific technical conditions, allows excellent depiction of the degree of myometrial tumor extension. It also has an excellent specificity for the detection of cervical extension. In addition, it allows evaluation of regional nodes, but with sensitivity values that are not perfect. The purpose of this paper is to review the MR imaging features of endometrial carcinoma along with its limitations and pitfalls.
...
PMID:[MR imaging evaluation of endometrial carcinoma]. 1910 27

The purpose of this study was to define guidelines for endometrial cancer staging with MRI. The technique included critical review and expert consensus of MRI protocols by the female imaging subcommittee of the European Society of Urogenital Radiology, from ten European institutions, and published literature between 1999 and 2008. The results indicated that high field MRI should include at least two T2-weighted sequences in sagittal, axial oblique or coronal oblique orientation (short and long axis of the uterine body) of the pelvic content. High-resolution post-contrast images acquired at 2 min +/- 30 s after intravenous contrast injection are suggested to be optimal for the diagnosis of myometrial invasion. If cervical invasion is suspected, additional slice orientation perpendicular to the axis of the endocervical channel is recommended. Due to the limited sensitivity of MRI to detect lymph node metastasis without lymph node-specific contrast agents, retroperitoneal lymph node screening with pre-contrast sequences up to the level of the kidneys is optional. The likelihood of lymph node invasion and the need for staging lymphadenectomy are also indicated by high-grade histology at endometrial tissue sampling and by deep myometrial or cervical invasion detected by MRI. In conclusion, expert consensus and literature review lead to an optimized MRI protocol to stage endometrial cancer.
...
PMID:Staging of endometrial cancer with MRI: guidelines of the European Society of Urogenital Imaging. 1919 9

Cervical, endometrial and ovarian carcinomas are the main malignant neoplasms of the female pelvis. For CT, a thin-slice venous phase with good bowel contrast is used. For MRI, an anti-peristaltic agent is necessary. Thin-slice T2- weighted TSE images with a high in-plane spatial resolution are particularly suitable for imaging the uterine wall; a parenteral contrast medium is absolutely necessary to demonstrate endometrial and ovarian carcinoma. In the guidelines, MRI is recommended only for cervical cancer FIGO 1b and higher stages; nevertheless, CT and MRI play an important role in preoperative diagnosis of these tumors. Lymph node staging is performed during surgery where possible. In patients with endometrial carcinoma, preoperative staging focuses on the infiltration depth in the myometrium. Preoperative diagnosis of ovarian cancer centers on any tumor spread in the abdomen, and diagnostic imaging methods are designed to provide the surgeon with information about compartments of a possible peritoneal carcinosis that are difficult to see. In patients with incidental findings of ovarian masses, CT and MRI can detect evidence of malignancy, although an exact differential diagnosis is not usually possible in this very heterogeneous group of ovarian tumors.
...
PMID:[Malignant neoplasms of the female pelvis]. 1919 93

A strategy to establish the diagnosis and the etiology of menorrhagia is necessary for an adaptated therapeutic care. The cross-examination must endeavour to assess bleedings and their clinical impact, and concentrate on specific pathology (such as hemostasis disorders). Clinical examination may eliminate cervical vaginal pathologies and estimate uterine volume. The diagnosis of pregnancy should always be considered and eliminated and that of iron deficiency anemia will be helpful. Explorations of hemostasis balance will be recommended according to clinical and biological features. Hormonal measurement are not contributive, except in diagnosis of SOPK. Endometrium biopsy with the Pipelle will be systematically performed after 40 years of age or in case of risk factors of endometrial cancer. Transvaginal ultrasonography is the first line exam to recommend in case of proved menorrhagia. Hysteroscopy and hysterosonography will be recommended if ultrasonography is not informative enough, or in case of medical treatment failure. MRI is recommended in an second intention (in case of multiple uterine fibroids, or suspected adenomyosis, and if an arterial embolization is required).
...
PMID:[Hierarchy for diagnostic and etiological management in menometrorrhagia]. 1926 13

We used combinations of taxan-based neoadjuvant and adjuvant full-dose chemotherapy and aggressive combined radiotherapy including clinical target volume extension, increased total dosage, hyperthermia, cryo- and local chemotherapy as radiosensitizers, for treatment of invasive and locally-advanced breast cancer or endometrial carcinoma with poor prognosis. 3D-ultrasound/CT/MRI--based designing of radiotherapy and monitoring of dynamic definition of target volume and "high risk volume" in organs at risk in cases of tumor progression was an indispensable measure. As a result, no local recurrence was reported in 73% for 36 months.
...
PMID:[Current strategies in radiotherapy for cervical and endometrial carcinoma]. 1994 73

PET-CT plays an increasing role in the diagnosis and treatment of gynaecological cancers. In cervix cancer, whilst MRI remains the best imaging technique for initial primary tumor staging, PET-CT has been showed to be a highly sensitive method to determine lymph node status, except in patients with early-stage cervical cancer where PET-CT cannot replace surgical exploration of pelvic lymph nodes. In patients with advanced cervical cancer, PET-CT has the potential of showing lymph node metastasis not only within the pelvis, but also outside the pelvis, more particularly in the para-aortic area. PET-CT has also been described as a useful tool in 3-D-based adaptative brachytherapy. In endometrial cancer, the issues are different, as the recent decade has seen a therapeutic decrease in early-stage disease, especially in postoperative radiation therapy, whilst more advanced disease have been approached with more aggressive treatments, integrating chemotherapy and external beam radiotherapy. Lymph node status is also an important issue and PET-Scan may replace lymph node surgical procedure particularly in obese patients.
...
PMID:Clinical evidence on PET-CT for radiation therapy planning in cervix and endometrial cancers. 2070 17

Functional imaging by means of dynamic multiphase contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) and diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) is now part of the standard imaging protocols for evaluation of the female pelvis. DCE-MRI and DW-MRI are important MR imaging techniques which enable the radiologist to move from morphological to functional assessment of diseases of the female pelvis. This is mainly due to the limitations of morphologic imaging, particularly in lesion characterization, accurate lymph node staging, assessment of tumour response and inability to differentiate post-treatment changes from tumour recurrence. DCE-MRI improves the accuracy of T2WI in staging of endometrial cancer. It also helps differentiate tumour recurrence from radiation fibrosis in patients with cervical cancer. DCE-MRI improves characterization of cystic adnexal lesions and detection of small peritoneal implants in patients with ovarian cancer. DW-MRI is valuable in preoperative staging of patients with endometrial and cervical cancer, especially in detection of extra-uterine disease. It does increase reader's confidence for detection of recurrent disease in gynaecological malignancies and improves detection of small peritoneal implants in patients with ovarian cancer. In this review article we give an overview of both DCE-MRI and DW-MRI techniques, concentrating on their main clinical application in the female pelvis, and present a practical approach of the added value of these techniques according to the main pathological conditions, highlighting the pearls and pitfalls of each technique.
...
PMID:The role of dynamic contrast-enhanced and diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging in the female pelvis. 2081 Feb 30


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>