Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (lung carcinoma)
23,830 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The radioimmunoassay of ACTH was used in a routine laboratory to localize the site of the lesion in 20 patients with Cushing's syndrome. Eight of the patients had no detectable circulating ACTH and had adrenal tumors removed, 12 had high levels and were diagnosed as having pituitary Cushing's syndrome. Very high levels of plasma ACTH were found in eight patients who had primary adrenal insufficiency, while ACTH was undetectable in ten patients with secondary hypoadrenalism. The routine use of this assay in endocrinology should reduce the hospitalization of patients under investigation for disorders of the pituitary--adrenal axis. Eight patients who had the ectopic ACTH syndrome and carcinoma of the lung were found to have very high levels of ACTH with no diurnal variation. Forty-seven patients with oat-cell carcinoma but without evidence of the ectopic ACTH syndrome had normal ACTH levels. A possible role of ACTH and other peptide hormones as tumor markers is mentioned.
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PMID:Application of adrenocorticotropin assays in a routine clinical laboratory. 17 40

Acute adrenal insufficiency is an uncommon complication of lung cancer and adrenal metastasis resection. Diagnosis is difficult to establish but an early recognition and treatment may be life-saving. A 55-year-old man underwent right upper lobectomy and adrenalectomy for lung carcinoma with right adrenal metastasis. Anaesthesia was obtained with propofol, alfentanil, atracurium and isoflurane. Blood pressure remained stable throughout surgical procedure and blood loss was about 3,000 ml. Several hours after the end of the procedure which was uneventful the circulator status worsened. The blood pressure was initially controlled with 500 ml of gelatin. External blood loss was about 200 ml. Clinical examination, chest X-ray and ECG were normal. Postoperative laboratory data showed a serum sodium at 134 mmol-1.l-1 and a serum potassium 5.1 mmol.l-1; haemoglobin concentration was 93 g.l-1. Arterial blood gas analysis, with a 5.1.min-1 nasal O2 flow showed a PaO2 at 108 mmHg, a PaCO2 at 30 mmHg and a pH at 7.44. Twelve hours later, a transient cardiac arrest occurred which responded to fluid load, dopamine and dobutamine. Six hours later, the patient went in ventricular fibrillation responding to an external electric countershock. No change in clinical status was noticed, except hyperthermia at 39.5% degrees C. Serum potassium concentration before cardiac arrest was 4.7 mmol-l-1. Main considered diagnoses were septic shock and acute adrenal insufficiency. Antibiotics (imipenem, amikacin and vancomycin) and hormonal treatment (hydrocortisone 200 mg.day-1), after blood samples had been obtained for bacteriological and hormonal examinations. The patient's condition improved dramatically within 48 hours. Shock was under control, dopamine and dobutamine were rapidly discontinued.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Postoperative acute adrenal insufficiency]. 801 76

Five patients with adrenal insufficiency and large adrenal glands at presentation are reported. Addison's disease was due to adrenal tuberculosis in three patients, with important changes in adrenal configuration on CT reflecting the natural history of the disease. Adrenal infiltration by non-Hodgkin lymphoma and metastatic carcinoma of the lung was the cause of the disease in the fourth and fifth patients, respectively, who developed signs of adrenal insufficiency before the diagnosis of the primary lesion became apparent. Histologic confirmation was established after unilateral adrenalectomy in three patients. In two patients with adrenal tuberculosis, long clinical and laboratory follow-up confirmed the diagnosis. This report indicates that Addison's disease is not infrequently associated with adrenal enlargement. Adrenal size is related to the cause and duration of the various disease states leading to adrenal insufficiency. Moreover, adrenal insufficiency associated with enlarged adrenal glands can be the presenting manifestation of lymphoma or metastasis.
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PMID:Adrenal insufficiency with enlarged adrenals. 866 67

Severe psychosis in patients with Cushing's syndrome is rare and generally difficult to treat. We report a 46-yr-old woman suffering from Cushing's syndrome caused by an inoperable ACTH-producing lung carcinoma. She was initially treated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Six months later she presented with severe psychosis. Laboratory findings revealed a severe hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis, which was caused by extremely high serum ACTH (788 ng/l) and cortisol (4.2 micromol/l). She was unresponsive to treatment with conventional antipsychotic drugs; she was therefore sedated and intubated. Treatment was started i.v. with etomidate, which blocks the cortisol synthesis, and orally by nasogastric tube with mifepristone, which competes with cortisol for binding to their receptors. To counteract adrenal insufficiency, she received corticosteroids. After 5 days there was a normalization of the ACTH, cortisol levels, and the metabolic disorders. After discontinuing etomidate she was extubated; there were no signs of psychosis observed. Computed tomography (CT) scan of the brain showed no metastasis, however CT scan of the abdomen showed liver metastasis and bilateral adrenal enlargement. Unfortunately, the clinical situation worsened and the patient died due to progression of the metastasis. This case report demonstrates the efficacy of a treatment of mifepristone with etomidate in a patient with an ectopic ACTH-producing Cushing's syndrome.
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PMID:Treatment of severe psychosis due to ectopic Cushing's syndrome. 1799 71

A 66-year-old man, chronic smoker, presented with episodes of syncope, hypotension and constitutional symptoms. Initial evaluation revealed pre-renal azotaemia and acute secondary adrenal insufficiency.MRI performed was interpreted as a pituitary macroadenoma with enlargement of the infundibulum (stalk). Further endocrinological tests performed suggested central hypothyroidism and hypogonadism. Subsequent development of haemoptysis, headache and diplopia warranted further investigations, which revealed stage IV small-cell lung carcinoma with adrenal metastases. Subsequent brain imaging showed lesions in the brain parenchyma, pituitary and stalk, characteristic of metastases. Thus, we present a very atypical case of pituitary metastases presenting with acute secondary adrenal insufficiency.
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PMID:Acute secondary adrenal insufficiency as the presenting manifestation of small-cell lung carcinoma. 2453 38

One of the endemic fungi, Blastomyces dermatitidis, can cause epidemics of infection with multiple persons involved in a point source outbreak but more commonly causes sporadic cases of infection within the areas of endemicity. Blastomycosis can present as an acute pneumonia which is often misdiagnosed as acute pneumococcal pneumonia or the infection may present as a chronic pneumonia along with weight loss, night sweats, hemoptysis, and a lung mass suggesting tuberculosis or carcinoma of the lung. Extrapulmonary infection with B. dermatitidis is protean with many different manifestations. Most commonly, skin or subcutaneous lesions are found with either a verrucous or warty appearance or in an ulcerative form. Cases have been misidentified as keratoacanthoma, pyoderma gangrenosum, carcinoma, or as Weber-Christian panniculitis if there are nodular subcutaneous lesions. Essentially any site or organ can have lesions of disseminated blastomycosis. In our series, cases of laryngeal carcinoma, adrenal insufficiency, thyroid nodules, granulomatous hypercalcemia, abnormal mammograms thought to represent breast carcinoma, otitis media with cranial extension, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, and hemolytic anemia of unknown cause have been misdiagnosed and blastomycosis subsequently identified as the cause. This infection causes manifestations which mimic many other more commonly diagnosed conditions and must always be considered by clinicians practicing in the endemic region.
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PMID:The endemic mimic: blastomycosis an illness often misdiagnosed. 2512 34

Background Although resection of the metastases is the treatment of choice for unilateral solitary adrenal metastasis of non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), the surgical treatment for bilateral adrenal metastases is quite rare, likely due to the coexistence of multiple synchronous metastases at other sites and/or primary adrenal insufficiency following bilateral adrenalectomy. We herein report a rare case of asynchronous metastasis of NSCLC to the bilateral adrenal glands with long-term survival after bilateral adrenalectomy. Case Report A 70-year-old male underwent right upper lobectomy for lung adenocarcinomaT2aN2M0, stageIIIA following induction chemotherapy. Forty-four months later, right adrenalectomy of a right adrenal tumor was performed, which revealed metastatic lung carcinoma. Following the administration of adjuvant chemotherapy, a metastatic tumor was detected in the left adrenal gland. Although there were no other signs of distant metastasis on radiological examinations, he underwent the chemotherapy due to the risk of adrenal insufficiency. However, on follow-up CT the adrenal lesion was found to have enlarged; therefore, left adrenalectomy was performed. Three years and six months later, he was doing well, with no evidence of recurrence. Conclusions Selected patients with solitary adrenal metastases of NSCLC can benefit from an aggressive treatment approach, even if such metastases are bilateral.
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PMID:Long-term survival after surgical treatment of metachronous bilateral adrenal metastases of non-small cell lung carcinoma. 2531 19

The authors report the case of a 69-year-old man with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and previous pulmonary tuberculosis, who presented to the emergency department with abdominal and low back pain, anorexia and weight loss, rapidly evolving into shock. An initial CT scan revealed pulmonary condensation with associated cavitation and an iliopsoas mass suggestive of a psoas abscess. He was admitted in an intensive care unit unit; after a careful examination and laboratory assessment, the aetiology was yet undisclosed. MRI showed multiple retroperitoneal lymphadenopathies, bulky nodular adrenal lesions and bilateral iliac lytic lesions. Hypocortisolism was detected and treated with steroids. A CT-guided biopsy to the psoas mass and lytic lesions identified infiltration of non-small lung carcinoma. The patient died within days. Psoas metastases and adrenal insufficiency as initial manifestations of malignancy are rare and can be misdiagnosed, particularly in the absence of a known primary tumour.
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PMID:Just another abdominal pain? Psoas abscess-like metastasis in large cell lung cancer with adrenal insufficiency. 2606 8

BACKGROUND Pituitary gland metastasis is rarely the initial presentation of metastatic cancer. Most cases of pituitary gland metastasis are asymptomatic with diabetes insipidus being the most common symptomatic presentation. It can rarely present with symptoms of hormone underproduction such as secondary adrenal insufficiency. Although pituitary gland metastasis is rare, it is underestimated, as it is commonly misdiagnosed with pituitary gland adenoma due to the lack of clear radiological criteria differentiating between both. CASE REPORT We present a case of a 62-year-old male who presented with weakness, blurry vision, and persistent hypoglycemia despite intravenous dextrose infusion and having discontinued taking his diabetes medications. Chest x-ray showed a left hilar mass, while computed tomography scan demonstrated a left superior hilar mass and hilar lymphadenopathy with bilateral adrenal nodules and a T6 vertebral lesion suspicious for metastasis. Further workup showed secondary adrenal insufficiency with a low adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) level. Vertebral biopsy was performed and confirmed the diagnosis of small cell carcinoma of the lung. This was followed by a brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which showed multiple metastatic lesions with an enhancing mass involving the right clivus, sella, and suprasellar cistern with mass effect on the optic chiasm and involvement of the cavernous sinus supporting the diagnosis of pituitary gland metastasis of small cell lung cancer. The patient received brain radiation, and repeated MRI showed regression of the previous MRI findings. CONCLUSIONS Secondary adrenal insufficiency is an unusual presentation of pituitary gland metastasis. Physicians should take into consideration both radiological findings and presentation to differentiate between pituitary gland metastasis and pituitary adenoma.
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PMID:Small Cell Lung Cancer with Pituitary Metastasis Presenting as Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency: A Case Report and Literature Review. 3077 89