Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report 8 cases of lympho-reticulosarcoma of the colon and emphasize the rareness of this tumour (10 percent of cases) compared with other localisations in the stomach and small intestine. Whether primary or secondary, lymphosarcoma of the colon has various radiological appearances, depending on the mode of development of the sarcoma in the wall of the colon. Mainly sub-mucosal, it may remain localised or extend to the whole of the colon, predominating in the ileo-coecal and recto-sigmoid regions. Localised tumour forms present either in the form of large polycyclic lacunae, sometimes invaginated or as vast ulcerations with irregular nodular margin, or as due to parietal infiltration and exoluminal development of the tumour mass and neighbouring adenopathy. It is sometimes confused with carcinoma of the colon, e.g. vegetating carcinoma, colloid carcinoma, or peritoneal metastases, or with a regional abscess, e.g. appendix abscess or diverticulosis. The correct diagnosis is made on operation. The extensive colonic forms rarely take on the appearance of lymphoid pseudopolyposis, more often that of a very unusual nodular form formed of hazy lenticular lacunae. It may be confused with nodular colitis, it differs from this, however, by the absence of ulceration, changes in caliber and the persistance of normal haustration, a reticulated appearance of the mucosal outline during evacuation of the barium. In all cases, the discovery of a colonic lympho-reticulosarcoma implies complete digestive radiological investigation in order to seek gastric, duodenal or intestinal localisations, together with a search for other extra-digestive localisations. In fact, the great diffusion of the lesions modifies the prognosis and the therapeutic attitude. These lymphosarcomas and reticulosarcomas of the colon have a similar pathological and radiological appearance but differ by their sensitivity to treatment with cobalt, as reticulosarcomas are more resistant.
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PMID:[Pathological, clinical and radiological study of colonic lympho-reticulosarcoma. Report of 8 cases (author's transl)]. 109 45

We evaluated the mortality of 835 white male and 36 female laboratory workers employed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture who died between January 1, 1970, and December 31, 1979. For males, the mortality odds ratio for all cancers was 1.0 (95% confidence interval = 0.8-1.2). Colon cancer, lymphosarcoma and reticulosarcoma, nonmalignant diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs, and suicide showed elevated mortality odds ratios. Only colon cancer showed an association with duration of employment as a laboratory worker. In an accompanying case-control study, the risk of colon cancer rose to 3.2 among those who had 20 or more years of employment as a laboratory worker. Among females, breast cancer was elevated (mortality odds ratio = 5.3; 95% confidence interval = 2.8-10.1).
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PMID:Mortality among laboratory workers employed at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. 159 26

Japanese men in Hawaii whose ancestral roots were in Okinawa were compared to Japanese migrants from all other prefectures. The Okinawan migrants have acquired fewer cancers than men from other prefectures (P = 0.12). No one primary site accounts for this difference. Stomach cancer rates showed the largest difference between the two migrant groups. This replicates the experience of Okinawans and non-Okinawans in Japan itself. Lymphosarcoma mortality rates are much higher in Okinawa than in all Japan, but this difference is not reproduced in Hawaiian migrants. This could be explained by a post migrational decrease in HTLV-I-related acute T-cell lymphoma/leukemia. Cancer of the mouth, pharynx and esophagus has decreased in all Japanese migrants, but the decrease is much greater among Okinawan migrants, suggesting they have escaped exposure to risk factors peculiar to the Okinawan environment. Colon cancer is more common in migrant Japanese than in U.S. whites. The dramatic increase in the frequency of this tumor affects Okinawan and non-Okinawan migrants to an equal degree.
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PMID:Cancer incidence in Hawaiian Japanese: migrants from Okinawa compared with those from other prefectures. 177 59