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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rhinocerebral phycomycosis is an uncommon opportunistic infection with ubiquitous fungi of the class Phycomycetes, starting in the nose and extending to the paranasal sinuses and then intracranially. The condition is often characterized by poor prognosis because of occlusion of the internal carotid artery. This disease is commonly associated with predispositions such as uncontrolled diabetes mellitus, which is the most common, immunosuppressive states and metabolic bankruptcy including leukemia,
lymphoma
, myeloma, malnutrition, uremic or diarrheal acidosis, severe burns, anemia, carcinoma, radiotherapy, liver cirrhosis, hemochromatosis, tuberculosis, septicemia, long-term medication of steroid, antibiotics and antimetabolite, drug addiction, cytotoxic drug administration and AIDS. Cases with unknown predisposition, however, have been infrequently reported in the literature. The authors report a case of rhinocerebral phycomycosis in which concurrence of Candida species instead of the above-mentioned common predispositions was considered a potential predisposition. To our knowledge, only 1 report in which Candida species are referred to as a potential predisposition for this disease has been previously issued. A 85-year-old man was admitted to our hospital on March 2, 1994 because of generalized convulsion. He had received a total extirpation of an ascending
colon cancer
in July 1993. On admission, physical inspection showed no abnormalities and neurological examination revealed obtunded consciousness without other abnormalities. He had no diabetes mellitus. Hematological and blood chemistry values were normal except for CA19-9 of 45 U/ml.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of rhinocerebral phycomycosis]. 760 36
The clinical characteristics of patients with second primary tumors in the ovary and endometrium were compared to those with single primary tumors treated at our Center during the same period of time. Despite the fact that the patients were under medical surveillance for the first primary tumor, most second tumors were diagnosed following patient symptoms and complaints, and not at a routine follow-up appointment. Patients with a second primary endometrial cancer had a more advanced stage of disease at diagnosis as compared to those with single endometrial cancer. This was not found to be true for patients with second ovarian cancer. Patients with primary breast cancer and
colon cancer
,
lymphoma
or melanoma were found to be at higher risk for developing a second primary tumor in the endometrium or ovary as compared to those with a primary tumor at other sites. Although there are no proven means for the early detection of these gynecologic malignancies, it seems prudent to draw the attention of medical practitioners to the need for a better gynecologic evaluation for women with cancer at other sites during their follow-up visits. Studies on the efficacy of currently available diagnostic techniques should be carried out to evaluate their yield in this high risk group.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of patients with a second primary tumor in the endometrium or ovary. 766 66
Gastrointestinal bleeding is believed to cause iron-deficiency anemia (IDA). The information concerning ideal evaluation of the gastrointestinal tract and exact findings in patients with IDA is scant. The aim of this study was to prospectively evaluate patients with IDA for gastrointestinal lesions potentially causing IDA at a US Army Teaching Medical Center with Gastroenterology Fellowship. Seventy patients with IDA had esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) and colonoscopy, and if this evaluation was unremarkable, then small bowel biopsy was obtained at EGD to evaluate for celiac disease. Enteroclysis was done if endoscopic evaluation was negative. At endoscopy, at least one lesion potentially accounted for the IDA in 50 (71%) patients. At colonoscopy, 21 (30%) patients had 22 lesions (four
colon cancer
, seven adenoma > 1 cm, six vascular malformation, four severely bleeding hemorrhoids, one ileal Crohn's); at EGD, 39 (56%) patients had 43 lesions (11 gastric erosion, 10 esophagitis, four vascular malformation, four celiac disease, three gastric cancer, three gastric ulcer, three duodenal ulcer, two gastric polyp > 1 cm, one duodenal
lymphoma
, one esophageal cancer, and one duodenal Crohn's). Twelve (17%) patients had both upper and lower gastrointestinal tract lesions. Twenty-four of 32 (75%) patients with positive fecal occult blood test had potentially bleeding lesions compared to 24 of 38 (63%) patients with negative fecal occult blood test (P > 0.05). Six of nine patients with malignancy had positive fecal occult blood test. Twenty patients with normal endoscopy and small bowel biopsy had normal enteroclysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prospective evaluation of gastrointestinal tract in patients with iron-deficiency anemia. 778 48
Primary colonic lymphomas are rare, but we identified 15 cases at our institution between 1973 and 1992. They comprised 5.8% of all cases of gastrointestinal
lymphoma
(15 of 259) and 0.16% of all cases of
colon cancer
(15 of 9,193) during the last 20 years. The most common presenting symptoms were abdominal pain and weight loss (40% each). In seven patients (47%), a palpable abdominal mass was noted on the initial physical examination. The most frequent site of involvement was the cecum (73%). Histologically, six (40%) were classified as high-grade and nine (60%) as intermediate-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The tumors usually presented at an advanced stage: in 13 of 15 patients (87%), the
lymphoma
had spread to the adjacent mesentery, the regional lymph nodes, or both when first diagnosed. The 5-year survival rate was 27% for all patients and 33% (4 of 12) for patients treated with combination chemotherapy. Two patients relapsed after 8 years of complete remission. Primary colonic lymphomas have an aggressive behavior and only a marginal response to surgery and combination chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Primary colonic lymphoma. Clinical presentation, histopathologic features, and outcome with combination chemotherapy. 807 13
A mouse monoclonal antibody V-715 was raised against fresh
colon cancer
tissues. Biochemical analysis elucidated that the antigen defined was adenosine deaminase binding protein (ADBP). In
colon cancer
cell lines, V-715 was positive in 8 out of 16 differentiated cancers and in 2 out of 8 poorly differentiated cancers. In frozen sections, ADBP was expressed in 17 out of 33 differentiated colon cancers, but none of 4 poorly differentiated colon cancers. In normal colon, the expression was observed in epithelium. In gastric cancers, ADBP was expressed in 10 out of 15 differentiated cancers, but weakly or only heterogenously expressed in 2 out of 8 poorly differentiated cancers. In normal gastric mucosa, ADBP was mainly detected in the foveolar epithelium, but was weakly or not expressed in the deep gastric glands. Carcinoid tumors and malignant
lymphoma
of the stomach did not express ADBP. These results suggest that ADBP may act as a marker of enterocytic differentiation in normal and neoplastic gastrointestinal cells, and might be exploitable in clinical and pathological diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancers.
...
PMID:Distribution of adenosine deaminase binding protein in normal and malignant tissues of the gastrointestinal tract studied by monoclonal antibodies. 809 85
The management and outcome of 80 women with an undiagnosed pelvic mass who were referred to the Gynecologic Oncology Division at the University of Rochester during a one year period were reviewed. All patients underwent an exploratory laparotomy for definitive diagnosis. We correlated the final diagnosis with the results of preoperative evaluation and intraoperative assessment. Of the 80 patients, 48 were diagnosed with malignant disease. Of patients with carcinoma, 32 had carcinoma of the ovaries, two had other gynecologic malignancies, ten had nongynecologic malignancies and four had synchronous gynecologic and nongynecologic carcinomas. Carcinoma of the colon and rectum was the most common nongynecologic carcinoma; other malignant diseases were found in the endometrium, vagina, colon and rectum and the breast as well as
lymphoma
. Preoperative roentgenographic examinations and colonoscopy only had a sensitivity of 38 percent in detecting primary
carcinoma of the colon
and rectum. Ultrasound of the pelvic region and computed tomographic scan of the abdomen did not improve prediction of malignant disease in the patient population. Serum CA 125 was elevated in 26 of 37 patients with a carcinoma; however, it was elevated with relatively equal frequency in carcinomas of the ovaries and colon and rectum. Intraoperative frozen section accurately identified the primary site of the disease in 90 percent of the patients. However, in the presence of a tumor in the ovaries, carcinomatosis and a tumor in the colon, the results of frozen section were erroneous in four of six patients. Because preoperative assessment seems to be of limited value in excluding nongynecologic lesions, we recommend that pelvic surgeons be prepared to manage operatively a variety of malignant disease or have appropriate consultation available at laparotomy.
...
PMID:Diagnoses after laparotomy for a mass in the pelvic area in women. 846 Apr 8
For more than 50 years, there has been documentation in the medical literature suggesting that regular sun exposure is associated with substantial decreases in death rates from certain cancers and a decrease in overall cancer death rates. Recent research suggests that this is a causal relationship that acts through the body's vitamin D metabolic pathways. The studies reviewed here show that (a) sunlight activation is our most effective source of vitamin D; (b) regular sunlight/vitamin D "intake" inhibits growth of breast and
colon cancer
cells and is associated with substantial decreases in death rates from these cancers; (c) metabolites of vitamin D have induced leukemia and
lymphoma
cells to differentiate, prolonged survival of leukemic mice, and produced complete and partial clinical responses in
lymphoma
patients having high vitamin D metabolite receptor levels in tumor tissue; (d) sunlight has a paradoxical relationship with melanoma, in that severe sunburning initiates melanoma whereas long-term regular sun exposure inhibits melanoma; (e) frequent regular sun exposure acts to cause cancers that have a 0.3% death rate with 2,000 U.S. fatalities per year and acts to prevent cancers that have death rates from 20-65% with 138,000 U.S. fatalities per year; (f) there is support in the medical literature to suggest that the 17% increase in breast cancer incidence during the 1991-1992 year may be the result of the past decade of pervasive anti-sun advisories from respected authorities, coinciding with effective sunscreen availability; and (g) trends in the epidemiological literature suggest that approximately 30,000 U.S. cancer deaths yearly would be averted by the widespread public adoption of regular, moderate sunning.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Beneficial effects of sun exposure on cancer mortality. 847 9
Radiolabeled monoclonal antibodies have been used for radioimmunotherapy studies with human tumor spheroids and murine and human tumor xenografts in experimental animals. This paper reviews the work that has been performed in these models with different types of cancer, and highlights those papers that have presented dosimetry estimates and attempts to correlate the findings. Radioimmunotherapy studies in multicell spheroids, as a model for micrometastases, have been performed in human neuroblastoma,
colon cancer
, and melanoma cell lines using 131I-, 125I-, 186Re-, and 212Bi-labeled antibodies. The uniform geometry of the spheroid has allowed radiation dose estimates to be made. Up to three logs of cell kill have been achieved with 131I- and 186Re-specific antibody with minimal toxicity from labeled nonspecific antibody, but 212Bi-antibody had little effect because of its short half-life as shown by Langmuir. It appears that the two most important factors for therapeutic efficacy in this model are good penetration of the radiolabeled antibody and an adequate radionuclide half-life to allow penetration of the immunoconjugate prior to significant radionuclide decay. Radioimmunotherapy studies in animals bearing transplants of
colon cancer
, leukemia,
lymphoma
, hepatoma, renal cell carcinoma, neuroblastoma, glioma, mammary carcinoma, small cell lung carcinoma, cervical carcinoma, ovarian carcinoma, and bladder cancer have been performed with 131I, 90Y, 186Re, 153Sm, and 177Lu beta emitting, and 212Bi alpha emitting radionuclides conjugated to monoclonal antibodies. A few studies compared different radionuclides in the same model system. The approaches that have been used in these studies to estimate tumor dosimetry include the MIRD approach, thermoluminescent dosimetry, autoradiography, and comparison to external irradiation. The majority of investigators have estimated the dose to tumor and normal organs using MIRD-based calculations (time-activity curve and equilibrium dose constant method). The range of tumor doses has been between 17 and 11 171 mGy/MBq of administered radioactivity. The effectiveness of radiolabeled monoclonal antibody therapy depends on a number of factors relating to the antibody such as specificity, affinity, and immunoreactivity. The density, location, and heterogeneity of expression of tumor-associated antigen within tumors will affect the localization and therapeutic efficacy of radiolabeled antibodies, as will physiological factors such as the tumor vascularity, blood flow, and permeability. These factors are discussed and examples are presented.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Experimental radioimmunotherapy. 849 64
Amitriptyline, a tricyclic antidepressant, was able to reverse the multidrug resistance efflux pump of human
colon cancer
subline SW 620 and multidrug resistant (mdr) mouse
lymphoma
cells by decreasing rhodamine 123 efflux. The inhibitory effect of amitriptyline on the efflux pump was dose dependent. An investigation was made of the effects of mouse tumour necrosis factor (TNF) alpha and interferon (IFN) gamma on the efflux pump activity of mdr cells together with amitriptyline compared to the par cells (mdr-). After long-term cytokine pretreatment of mdr cells, the amitriptyline was more effective, due to some synergism between the amitriptyline and TNF-alpha.
...
PMID:Reversal of multidrug resistance by amitriptyline in vitro. 861 10
To analyze the possible adverse effects of low dose methotrexate (MTX) therapy, 276 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were examined retrospectively. One hundred and seven patients (39%) experienced 113 adverse events : 57 showed liver dysfunction, 24 gastrointestinal complaints, 13 cutaneous symptoms, 6 respiratory symptoms, and 6 malignancies. Interestingly, 3 patients developed a dry cough without infiltration nor interstitial shadow on chest X-ray. The cough was rapidly resolved by discontinuation of MTX, but it recurred in 1 patient when MTX was re-administered. This finding might suggest a close association between MTX administration and the occurrence of dry cough. Of the 6 patients with malignancies diagnosed during MTX therapy, 2 showed malignant
lymphoma
, 2 lung cancer, 1 breast cancer and 1
colon cancer
. MTX might have an oncogenic potential in RA because the coincidence rate, especially with respect to
lymphoma
, was significantly higher than estimated in a normal population.
...
PMID:[Adverse effects of low-dose methotrexate therapy in rheumatoid arthritis]. 896 53
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