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

A non-concurrent prospective study was made on deaths from cancer and other causes occurring among 2,675 male workers at a metal refinery from 1949 to 1971. The expected number of deaths computed by applying age- and cause-specific death rates of Japanese males to these workers was compared with the observed number of deaths. Among 839 copper smelters, significantly increased mortalities were noted for lung cancer (SMR = 1,189) and colon cancer, but nor for cancer of the stomach, liver (primary) and biliary passages, pancreas and skin or for leukemia, tuberculosis, cerebrovascular diseases, heart diseases and liver cirrhosis. A dose-response relationship was demonstrated between the mortality from lung cancer and the degree of exposure. A very high excess mortality from lung cancer (SMR = 2,500) was seen among copper smelters who were considered to have been most heavily exposed to arsenic or workers who had engaged in sintering and blast furnace operations for 15 years of more before 1949. The latent period of lung cancer was 37.6 years on average, and not related to level of exposure. Twenty-six of 29 deaths from lung cancer among copper smelters occurred after they had left the refinery. Other production workers and clerical workers showed no significant excess mortality from any kind of cancer.
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PMID:A cohort study on mortality from cancer and other causes among workers at a metal refinery. 125 55

Four cases of coexisting tuberculosis and carcinoma of the colon (CTCC) are reported. All the patients were female and the mean age was 49 +/- 11 years. The tumour involved the right colon in three patients and the distal transverse colon in the other. The two lesions coexisted at the same site in two patients. Mucinous carcinoma was the predominant type seen in three patients. The characteristics of patients with CTCC were compared with those of 54 patients who had carcinoma of the colon (CC) and 17 patients with tuberculosis of the colon (TC) seen during the same period. All the four CTCC patients were female, compared with 13 of 54 patients with CC (P less than 0.001). These two groups were similar in mean age, anatomic sites and histopathological tumour types. The CTCC patients were significantly older than the TC patients (49 +/- 11 years vs 34 +/- 10 years, P less than 0.05). The sex distribution of TC patients was similar to that of CTCC patients, 14 of 17 patients being female. All TC lesions were confined to the right colon. The present study showed a high frequency of carcinoma in patients with colonic tuberculosis, signifying the need for epidemiological and histopathological investigations into the aetiological relationship between the two diseases, the possibility of which was suggested recently by Japanese researchers. The relevant literature on 58 previously reported patients with CTCC was reviewed.
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PMID:Coexisting tuberculosis and carcinoma of the colon. 166 Nov 11

Ten years' follow-up of mortality of 1.7 million persons aged 15 years or more with measured body weight and height demonstrates a consistent correlation between body mass index and mortality. The risk function is an asymmetrical U-function. This shape makes the determination of an optimum very uncertain. The two tails in the distribution of the body mass index show marked differences as to the causes of death: the lower tail is characterized by tuberculosis, lung cancer, obstructive lung diseases, and the upper tail by cerebrovascular and cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and (for males) colon cancer.
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PMID:Hazard of obesity--the Norwegian experience. 316 65

Two patients with primary tuberculosis of the ileocecal region and transverse colon were thought to be Crohn's disease or carcinoma of the colon. No pathognomonic symptoms or roentgenographic findings were present, and the diagnosis was made on the basis of histopathological features including the presence of alcohol/acid fast bacilli. In one case human tubercle bacilli were cultured. The involved bowel segments were resected and the patients received antituberculous chemotherapy postoperatively. Although tuberculosis of the colon is very rare it should however be considered in cases of vague bowel dysfunction.
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PMID:Tuberculosis of the large bowel. Report of two cases. 674 86

A 47-year old woman was admitted to our hospital with complaints of headache and right occipital swelling. Brain CT scan showed right occipital bone defect with a sequestrum and soft tissue swelling. T1 weighted MRI enhanced by GD-DTPA revealed several nodules. A right occipital craniotomy was performed. Subcutaneous pus and a well-circumscribed yellowish, firm mass which existed under the bone defect was extirpated. Pathologically, this mass was considered to be a tuberculoma and intracranial nodules were suspected to be cerebral tuberculosis. Anti-tuberculous therapy was started. Since her admission fecal occult blood continued and endoscopic examination with biopsy revealed sigmoid colon cancer. Sigmoidectomy was performed and she has been well during 1 year post-operative follow up. Although tuberculous disease are decreasing in number in our country, we must take into account of the existence of skull tuberculosis.
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PMID:[A case of miliary tuberculosis with skull tuberculosis]. 756 59

Interest in the role of mycobacterial infection in Crohn's disease has been revived by the cultural detection of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis in patients with Crohn's disease. This hypothesis was examined serologically using assays with high specificity for Crohn's disease. The effect of intestinal resection on serum antibodies specific for Crohn's disease was investigated with an immunoblot assay and an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay using the 45/48 kilodalton doublet antigen of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Antibodies were detected in 64.7% of patients with Crohn's disease (n = 17), 10% of patients with ulcerative colitis (n = 10), 5% of patients with carcinoma of the colon (n = 20), and none of 10 healthy subjects with the immunoblot assay. Statistical comparison of the Crohn's disease patients with each control group resulted in p = 0.0000236. Immunoglobulin G was essentially unchanged 75 days (mean) after surgery. After more than 180 days, however, the antibody response was reduced in all of five patients studied, and was no longer demonstrable in two of them (40%). Simultaneously, the Crohn's disease activity index (CDAI) decreased. Both the high specificity of this assay for Crohn's disease and the diminished antibody response after intestinal resection in parallel with decreased CDAI support a mycobacterial aetiology of Crohn's disease.
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PMID:Effect of intestinal resection on serum antibodies to the mycobacterial 45/48 kilodalton doublet antigen in Crohn's disease. 759 Apr 31

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)
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PMID:[A case of rhinocerebral phycomycosis]. 760 36

We report on a case of ileocoecal tuberculosis. The clinical, radiological, endoscopic and pathologic findings are considered. The differential diagnosis between tuberculosis, chronic inflammatory bowel diseases and carcinoma of the colon are described.
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PMID:[Tuberculosis of the large intestine--a differential diagnosis of inflammatory and neoplastic colon tumors]. 767 62

Health objectives, developed by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, were published recently in the document entitled Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives. They were developed to guide national and local health policy toward actions to increase the health of the nation. To effectively apply these objectives locally, epidemiologists and health planners must work together. Through collaboration, the Healthy People 2000 objectives can be prioritized to guide health policy and planning on a regional basis. The purpose of this study was to assess certain health status indicators in southwestern Pennsylvania to determine whether it was likely that the year 2000 targets would be met if trends from the past 20 years were to continue. The following mortality rates were analyzed: heart disease, homicide, breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer, suicide, motor vehicle accidents, work-related injury, and infant mortality. In addition, incidence of the following diseases was evaluated against the year 2000 targets: gonorrhea, primary and secondary syphilis, measles, tuberculosis, and AIDS. By employing epidemiological principles and considering strategic planning needs, it is possible to prioritize some of the health care needs in local areas for the next decade.
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PMID:Epidemiologic indicators of health status to guide health care management decision making. 1013 Feb 41

It has been suggested that components of our diet play an essential role in carcinogenesis. Anthropometric indices, such as body weight and height, have often been considered as measurements of prevailing diet and nutrition in childhood respectively. To investigate to what extent height and body weight are associated with the risk of gastrointestinal cancer, data from a Norwegian screening programme for tuberculosis were analysed. More than 1,100,000 individuals, aged 30-69 years at the time of examination, were included in the study. Body weight, expressed as Quetelet's index (QI), and height records were linked with vital status data from Statistics Norway and the Cancer Registry of Norway. The analysis shows that individuals in the first quintile of height had a lower relative risk than later quintiles for colon cancer, independent of sex and stage of disease at completion of follow-up. The association between height and rectal cancer is similar, but weaker. Men in the fifth quintile of QI have a relative risk of 1.39 for colon cancer, compared with the first quintile, and they also have a slightly elevated risk for rectal cancer. Among women, the pattern is unclear, but we observed a significant relationship between high QI and cancer of the gallbladder. Our results indicate that prevailing diet and living conditions in early life do play a role, and seem to support the hypothesis that anthropometric indices could be of importance as indirect markers for the risk of colon cancer and, to some extent, for cancer of the rectum and gallbladder.
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PMID:Height, weight and gastrointestinal cancer: a follow-up study in Norway. 1033 56


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