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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Following resection of carcinoma of the colon, local recurrence at the site of the anastomosis must be expected in about 10%. Recurrence diagnosed early can be resected in 50%. Double contrast technique has proven to be most helpful in early diagnosis of recurrence. Therefore, radiographic follow-up examination, in adequate time intravals permit an early differentiation between lesions due to recurrence and due to the surgical procedure or prolonged healing of the anastomosis. Close cooperation with clinical follow-up, especially by endoscopy and biopsy, guarantees reliably good care of patients after resection of cancer of the colon or rectum.
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PMID:[Radiologic diagnosis of benign and malignant changes occurring at anastomoses following resection of colonic cancer (author's transl)]. 49 5

Established cancer in the liver can, in selected patients who have a good arterial circulation in these tumors, be effectively treated by intrahepatic artery radioactive yttrium-90 resin microspheres. Even in unselected patients treated in the last five years by the author, 17 of 25 patients treated have had good objective regression of cancers, improvement of symptoms and prolongation of life. Treatment is relatively simple and associated with few side effects. For adjuvant therapy of colon cancer having positive nodes (Dukes C), internal radiation therapy of the liver is best done with Phosphorus-32 Colloid passed through the circulation of the gut to be effectively and homogeneously trapped by the Kupffer cells of the liver. Four such patients have been subjected to a pilot study--three of the four are doing well without significant side effects and no evidence of liver cancer after two years. When the fourth died of brain metastases, he too had less liver cancer than would be expected.
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PMID:Internal radiation therapy of hepatic cancer. 49 90

Ferritin from malignant tissue differs electrophoretically from normal ferritin. The molecular basis of this difference has not yet been defined. Malignant tissue contains a mixture of ferritins from normal cells, inflammatory cells as well as cancer cells. GW-39 is a pure colon carcinoma cell system that synthesizes human carcinoembryonic antigen. Therefore, ferritin was isolated from normal colon mucosa and colon cancer tissues, as well as from the colon carcinoma cell line, to clarify the molecular relationship between normal and malignant ferritins. Colon carcinoma ferritin differs in primary structure from normal colon mucosal ferritin and contains at least six additional different tryptic peptides. These six peptides were also found in the ferritin from the colon carcinoma cell line. These data suggest that the alteration in ferritin structure occurs at the cellular level and is associated with the malignant state.
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PMID:Alteration in tryptic peptide patterns of ferritins purified from human colon carcinoma. 50 93

Recent epidemiologically and experimental research has implicated dietary factors, including alcoholic drinks, in cancers of the colon and rectum. Analysis of time trends in cancer mortality since 1921, in the United States, England and Wales, Australia, and New Zealand, in relation to changes in per capita consumption of foodstuffs and alcohol reveals some support for the protective effect of fibre, but an inconsistent role for fat and meat in colon cancer. For rectal cancer, and to a lesser extent colon cancer, the most consistent correlate in comparisons across time, and between place, sex, and age-group, is beer consumption. Possible reasons for this correlation within this data set are discussed.
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PMID:Time trends in colo-rectal cancer mortality in relation to food and alcohol consumption: United States, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. 54 Nov 53

Cholesterol-5 alpha, 6 alpha-epoxide has been implicated as an etiologic agent in human colon cancer. The epoxide is metabolized by human intestinal microflora to a product which was characterized by thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography as well as combined gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Chromatographic properties are identical with authentic cholestan-3 beta, 5 alpha, 6 beta-triol, and these results suggest that microbial epoxide hydrase activity is present in the human colon.
Cancer Biochem Biophys 1978
PMID:Evidence of epoxide hydrase activity in human intestinal microflora. 55 96

A family manifesting the Cancer Family Syndrome has been evaluated extensively from the medical and genetic standpoint. Findings of excess occurrence of carcinoma of the colon and endometrium, multiple primary cancer, early age of onset, and autosomal dominant mode of genetic transmission mandate a program of increased surveillance and cancer education. Prophylactic surgical implications are provided for certain of these enormously high cancer risk patients.
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PMID:The surgeon, genetics, and cancer control: the Cancer Family Syndrome. 55 13

The relationship between food intake and cancer of the large bowel was assessed by calculating the average intakes of foods, nutrients and dietary fibre in the different regions of Great Britain and relating these to the regional pattern of death from colon and rectal cancers between 1969 and 1973. No significant associations were found with the consumption of fat, animal protein or beer, nor with current estimates of total dietary fibre intake. Average intakes of the pentose fraction of total dietary fibres, and of vegetables other than potatoes, were negatively correlated with the truncated age- and sex-standardized death rates from colon cancer (r = -0.960 and -0.940). Specific components of dietary fibre may therefore inhibit colon carcinogenesis.
Br J Cancer 1979 Sep
PMID:Dietary fibre and regional large-bowel cancer mortality in Britain. 57 89

Carcinoma of the colon occurred in four generations of a family, including two of three siblings of one generation and eight of 19 members of the next generation. In addition, uterine cancer or lymphoproliferative malignancies were found in two family members. Of 41 members of the fourth generation, two were found to have colon cancer and one had malignant lymphoma. Clinical features were similar to those patients with "cancer family syndrome." Although a precise genetic mechanism is uncertain, it appeared to be transmitted as an autosomal dominant character.
Cancer 1977 Mar
PMID:Familial occurrence of colon and uterine carcinoma and of lymphoproliferative malignancies: clinical description. 57 84

Incidence rate of colon cancer is low in India compared to the Western countries. The dietary habits may be the protective factor in our population. During a 32 year period (1941-1972), 555 cases of colonic cancer were recorded at the Tata Memorial Hospital, Bombay. Among the social groups utilizing this hospital, the Parsis (Zoroastrians) have the highest incidence of colonic cancer. The frequency of cancer of the caecum and sigmoid are almost equal. Cancer of splenic and hepatic flexures are predominantly seen in men. Of the resected cases 50% survived for 5 years and 40% for 10 years. When cancer was localised, the 5 year survival rate was 64%. The 5 year survival rat among transverse colon cancer patients was 70%. The skin was the commonest site of a second cancer among colon cancer patients; the possible etiological association of these two cancers appears very intriguing.
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PMID:Cancer of the Colon: 32 years of experience in Bombay, India. 59 59

An abnormal zone of DNA synthesis at the surface and upper portion of colonic crypts has been thought to be related to future adenomatous polyp development and to express a regulatory defect in the mechanism that normally terminates synthesis in the upper third. As part of a screening program for early colon cancer detection, patients over 40 years of age found to have occult blood in their stool (Ho+) are evaluated by barium enema and colonscopy as well as isotopic incorporation studies of biopsy and lavage specimens. This proliferative abnormality occurred most frequently among patients with an adenoma or adenocarcinoma although the frequency varied among simultaneous biopsies from the same patient. Specimens from Ho+ patients with a tumor often contained small areas of focal atypism in the biopsy or fragments of atypical epithelial cells in the lavage sample. A small group of Ho+ patients in whom no overt neoplasm could be detected also demonstrated surface-labeled epithelial cells with morphological alteration of these cells. Based on the microscopic findings presented, continued surveillance of these patients is suggested, as well as extension of these studies to include other high risk groups.
Cancer 1977 Nov
PMID:Early detection of colonic neoplasia in patients at high risk. 59 71


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