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

Traumatic, clostridial myonecrosis is a rare and serious complication of wounds. Nontraumatic, metastatic, clostridial myonecrosis may be caused by carcinoma of the large intestine. Nontraumatic myonecrosis becomes evident with localized pain, generalized toxicity, local signs of inflammation, and crepitation. Serum creatine kinase determinations may be of help in diagnosing patients suspected of having acute myonecrosis. Immediate heroic surgical intervention, usually with demonstration of Clostridium septicum, is mandatory to control the myonecrosis. Appropriate antibiotic therapy is a valuable adjunct to surgical intervention, and penicillin in massive doses appears to be the agent of choice for the clostridia. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy may help in the optimal control. General supportive measures, including frequent blood transfusions, are most important. To save the life of the patient with nontraumatic, metastatic, clostridial myonecrosis, it is necessary, as soon as the patient's general condition permits, to diagnose and eliminate the cause of the myonecrosis. In addition to the case reported, 16 cases have been reported in the literature, making a total of 17. Five patients have survived (survival rate, 29 percent).
Dis Colon Rectum 1986 Dec
PMID:Carcinoma of the large intestine and nontraumatic, metastatic, clostridial myonecrosis. 353 58

The histopathology of 304 patients registered in the Canadian Familial Polyposis Registry (CFPR) with a diagnosis of supposed adenomatous polyposis (AP) was reviewed. The diagnosis was changed in 17 (5.6 percent) of these patients. Group 1 consisted of nine patients who had adenocarcinomas plus multiple tubular adenomas (seven) or metaplastic polyps (two). Eight patients who had no colon cancer comprised Group 2. In these patients, the diagnosis was changed to lymphoid polyposis (2), metaplastic polyps (3), isolated adenomas (2), or juvenile polyposis (1). All 17 patients had had previous colonic resections. Following the change in diagnosis, this treatment was considered inappropriate in 11 patients. Treatment, prognosis, and follow-up of patients and affected family members depend on the type of polyposis syndrome diagnosed. Correct histologic assessment of polyps prior to initial surgery is essential.
Dis Colon Rectum 1987 Aug
PMID:Surgery based on misdiagnosis of adenomatous polyposis. The Canadian Polyposis Registry experience. 362 61

The characteristics of 702 colorectal cancer patients are described in relation to the presence of absence of a family history of colorectal cancer in near relatives. No statistically significant associations were found between those with a family history of colorectal cancer and age at detection, sex, country of birth, religion, number of cancers (single, synchronous, or metachronous), previously removed benign colorectal polyps, and adenomatous polyps found in the resection specimen. The family history rate of colorectal cancer for colon cancer cases was statistically significantly higher than for rectal cancer cases (chi 2(1) = 3.8, P = .05) and there was a gradient of decreasing risk from colon to rectum. The family history rate of colorectal cancer in parents of those who were less than 50 years old was twice that of those 50 or older (P = .07), consistent with the view that earlier age of onset is a characteristic of those with a family history of colorectal cancer. There was a statistically significantly higher family history rate of colorectal cancer in respondents who knew of the disease compared with those who did not (chi 2(1) = 5.5, P less than .05). It is unclear if this effect represents recall bias or self-selection bias. In contrast, the rates for a family history of heart disease and stroke were similar, irrespective of the respondent's knowledge of their colorectal cancer status. Thus in the Melbourne study, the family history rate of colorectal cancer was higher in colon cancer than in rectal cancer, there was a decreasing gradient of risk from colon to rectum, and a tendency for earlier age of onset of colorectal cancer in those with a history of this cancer in a parent.
Dis Colon Rectum 1987 Aug
PMID:The Melbourne Colorectal Cancer Study. Characterization of patients with a family history of colorectal cancer. 362 63

Anticarcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) antisera which showed no reactions with normal adult feces were prepared in guinea pigs. Using these, levels of CEA in feces from patients with colorectal carcinoma were measured by gel diffusion and rocket immunoelectrophoresis. Sixteen of 22 (73 percent) patients with carcinoma of the colon or rectum (Dukes' A4/6, B6/8, C6/7, D0/1) had detectable CEA in their feces, while none was detected in the feces of four patients with gastric ulcers or in those of 22 normal volunteers. Five of the 16 fecal CEA-positive patients showed no elevation of plasma CEA levels. Measurements using a commercial CEA kit (Abbott Laboratories) could not detect the differences between fecal CEA values of patients with colorectal carcinoma and benign diseases, or those of normal volunteers. These results suggest that measurement of fecal CEA by specific anti-CEA antisera will be valuable in screening and diagnosis of colorectal carcinoma.
Dis Colon Rectum 1987 Aug
PMID:Usefulness of carcinoembryonic antigen measurement in feces of patients with colorectal cancer. 362 64

This investigation was based on an epidemiologic association of milk consumption and decreased intestinal cancer risk. Furthermore, there is also some indirect evidence that calcium supplementation in humans and animals may decrease colon cancer risk and that calcium, by inference, may be the protective factor in milk. In order to investigate these associations in a controlled laboratory setting, dietary supplementation of low fat dried milk (37 g/kg diet; N = 18) and calcium carbonate (40 mg/kg rat/day; N = 17) were compared separately to regular diet controls in the rat-dimethylhydrazine colon carcinogenesis model. The results of this investigation showed that neither milk-supplemented rats nor calcium carbonate-supplemented rats had fewer DMH-induced colorectal (P = .374) or total gastrointestinal tumors (P = .291) than did regular diet controls (N = 10; by analysis of variance [ANOVA]). Milk supplementation did result in a significant decrease in tumor burden when measured by incidence of metastases (P = .035) and of intestinal obstruction (P = .011; by chi-square test), when compared with calcium-supplemented and control rats. Though this implies that milk supplementation provides protection against some aspects of carcinogenesis of the colon, in rats fed low fat diets, this does not appear to be mediated through the calcium content of milk.
Dis Colon Rectum 1987 Dec
PMID:The effect of dietary milk and calcium on experimental colorectal carcinogenesis. 369 Dec 67

Since the medical management of persons with adenomatous colorectal polyps differs from that of those with hyperplastic polyps, accuracy of diagnosis is essential. Although many physicians have grown confident that their skills of visual diagnosis are adequate, few data exist to support this confidence. In order to examine the accuracy of physicians' judgments regarding colorectal polyp histology, the visual diagnosis of physicians experienced in endoscopy was compared with the histologic report. Eighty-one polyps were discovered by flexible sigmoidoscopy among 718 participants in a colon cancer screening program. Eighty percent of all polyps were detected accurately. The diagnostic sensitivity of detecting adenomas was 69 percent, while specificity (accurate diagnosis of hyperplastic polyps) was 86 percent, and there were an additional eight false negative and eight false positive diagnoses. Further analyses revealed that there are individual patterns of diagnostic mistakes made by physicians and that mistakes frequently are related to polyp size. These findings are particularly important in light of the expanding numbers of relatively inexperienced primary care providers performing flexible sigmoidoscopy whose diagnoses may be strongly dependent on polyp size.
Dis Colon Rectum 1987 Apr
PMID:Physician accuracy in diagnosing colorectal polyps. 382 72

In a prospective study of 402 colorectal cancer patients, 133 patients (46 men and 87 women) presented with right colon cancer. There was no significant difference between men and women in right colon cancer incidence. Common presenting features were abdominal pain, weight loss, and anemia. Ninety-one patients underwent resection with curative intent. There were significantly fewer Dukes' A tumors in the right colon cancer series (P less than 0.05). Significantly more women in the right colon cancer group were over 70 years old (P less than 0.05). The findings of peritoneal metastases and poorly differentiated lesions at initial surgery also were associated significantly with women who had right colon cancer (P less than 0.05). This study confirms previous reports of more advanced tumors in the right colon. The need for age, sex, and subsite differences to be taken into account when assessing treatment outcomes or survival is emphasized.
Dis Colon Rectum 1986 Apr
PMID:Age and sex differences in right colon cancer. 394 13

The more common patterns of dissemination and recurrence of colonic cancer are known and well-documented. In contrast, extravisceral, distant soft tissue metastases are comparatively rare. Therefore, these metastases are not subject to meaningful generalizations, with the exception that they are often associated with widespread metastatic disease. This report describes the first case of carcinoma of the colon metastatic to the skeletal muscle of the contralateral buttock and the sciatic nerve without concurrent evidence of pelvic or distant metastases. Curative resection was not possible because of involvement of the proximal sciatic nerve.
Dis Colon Rectum 1985 Feb
PMID:Isolated metachronous metastases to soft tissues of the buttock from a colonic adenocarcinoma. 397 5

Three cases of adenocarcinoma of the appendix are reported. All three patients presented with acute appendicitis and the tumors were diagnosed only on histologic examination of the excised appendix. The first patient subsequently had a right hemicolectomy and was proven to have a Dukes' B tumor. The second patient probably had a Dukes' B also, but no further surgery was performed because of advanced presenile dementia. Advanced disease was found in the third patient. Analysis of 145 cases reported over the last ten years suggests that, unless the tumor is in Dukes' A stage, right hemicolectomy should be carried out if the patient is fit for radical surgery. The overall prognosis appears to be the same as that for carcinoma of the colon.
Dis Colon Rectum 1985 Jun
PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the appendix. 400 40

The generally held belief that early diagnosis and treatment are associated with a greater proportion of localized tumors and better prospects of salvage is not supported in carcinoma of the large intestine. This study is not to be interpreted to mean that purposefully delayed treatment in an individual patient will improve his chances of survival. Its purpose is to place the emphasis on early diagnosis in its proper perspective. Entirely different methods of diagnosis need to be developed so as to be able to diagnose carcinoma of the large intestine during its presymptomatic phase.
Dis Colon Rectum 1985 Aug
PMID:Relationship of symptom duration and survival in patients with carcinoma of the colon and rectum. 401 22


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