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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (
Thoracic
)
6,478
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is a high incidence of respiratory tuberculosis in the British population of Indian subcontinent (Asian) ethnic origin. Granulomatous diseases can cause long term lymph node enlargement. Separate computed tomography (CT) criteria for normal
nodal
size could therefore be necessary when staging thoracic malignancy in Asian patients. The objective of this study was to measure mediastinal lymph node size in an Asian population, and to correlate
nodal
size with previous tuberculosis. Chest CT scans on all Asian patients over a 5 year period were reviewed and those with pulmonary disease, malignancy or grossly distorted anatomy were excluded. The study group consisted of 48 patients (26 male, 22 female) aged 10-75 years (mean 47 years). All nodes were measured and the site of those greater than 7 mm was recorded using the American
Thoracic
Society (ATS) lymph node map. 81.3% of patients had nodes less than or equal to 7 mm at all ATS stations, 10.4% had nodes of 8-10 mm and 8.3% had nodes greater than 10 mm. All nodes measuring more than 7 mm were in regions 4R, 10R and 7. Fourteen patients had signs of previous tuberculosis, and in this group 50% had nodes greater than 7 mm as compared with 6% in the group with no signs of previous tuberculosis (p < 0.001, X2 test). Despite these differences only four of the 48 patients (8.3%) had nodes greater than 10 mm, which is in keeping with other general population studies. Thus the generally accepted size criteria for mediastinal lymph node enlargement (greater than 10 mm) can reasonably be applied to all Asian patients when staging lymphoma or bronchogenic carcinoma.
...
PMID:Mediastinal lymph node size in an Asian population. 779 68
There have been no major breakthroughs in surgical management for primary lung cancer during the past 40 years. Improved 5-year survival relates primarily to improved preoperative staging and appropriate selection of patients for resection. Perioperative morbidity and mortality, however, has been significantly reduced. Certain principles pertain to current surgical management: resection remains the best treatment for patients with localized, non-small cell primary lung cancer. Accurate preoperative diagnosis and staging: whenever possible, it is desirable to establish the diagnosis and cell type before operation. Accurate evaluation of the N status warrants wide application of invasive staging with mediastinoscopy or a variant. Indications for resection: only patients in whom a complete resection is anticipated should be selected for surgery. Such cases included T1 to T4 stages, N0 and N1 tumors, and selected N2 cases. The indication for resection in patients with hematogenous metastases are anecdotal. Intraoperative staging: accurate and deliberate intraoperative staging with evaluation of nodes using the American
Thoracic
Society map is highly desirable. The nature of
nodal
metastases exerts a critical influence on prognosis and in the selection of patients for surgical resection. At present, there is no clear indication for adjuvant therapy in surgically resected cases other than for evaluation and clinical trials.
...
PMID:Current status of surgical resection for lung cancer. 798 59
Using the pre-therapy CT scans of 266 node positive non-small cell lung cancer patients, we analysed the lymphatic pathways and the incidence of lymph node metastases in regional lymph nodes (as described by CT criteria corresponding to the modified mapping scheme of the American
Thoracic
Society), in order to develop the target volume for curative irradiation treatment. Among the 105 patients with node positive left sided primaries, the incidence of involvement of the ipsilateral supraclavicular lymph nodes was 9.5%, and the incidence of involvement of the contralateral lymph nodes was 3.8%. The incidence of involvement of the contralateral hilar lymph nodes was 4.8%. Among the 161 patients with
nodal
positive right sided primaries, the incidence of involvement of the ipsilateral supraclavicular lymph nodes was 8.7% and the incidence of involvement of the contralateral lymph nodes was 1.8%. For this group of patients, the incidence of involvement of the contralateral hilar lymph nodes was 3.7%. All patients with involvement of the contralateral hilar lymph nodes died within 2.5 years of diagnosis. In the cases where there was involvement of the supraclavicular lymph nodes, the patients died within 1.6 years. Involvement of the ipsilateral and/or contralateral supraclavicular lymph nodes, and/or the contralateral hilar lymph nodes, is defined as N3 disease, and is included in Stage IIIb. No curative surgery is indicated for these patients. Why therefore should this group of patients be treated with curative intent by irradiation of the primary, ipsilateral and contralateral hilar lymph nodes, as well as mediastinal, ipsilateral and contralateral supraclavicular lymph nodes? The curative radiation treatment volume for lung cancer has to include the primary tumor and the ipsilateral hilar, and the low and high mediastinal lymph nodes, as is indicated for Stage I, II and IIIa disease.
...
PMID:The lymphatic pathways of non-small cell lung cancer and their implication in curative irradiation treatment. 808 6
It is now a decade since the American
Thoracic
Society (ATS) lymph node map was first described. Recently it has been upgraded to include supraclavicular and superior diaphragmatic lymph nodes. By standardising terminology the map aids in the provision of a more valid data base to evaluate diagnostic techniques and therapeutic protocols. Despite these potential benefits the map has failed to gain widespread use amongst European radiologists. This essay illustrates the relationship of the
nodal
stations to normal anatomy utilizing calcified nodes on CT scans. The ease with which the map can be applied to cross-sectional anatomy is emphasized. It is hoped that the images will act as a teaching aid to promote greater acceptance and use of the ATS map. The relationship of the
nodal
stations to the new American Joint Classification of disease extent is also outlined.
...
PMID:The American Thoracic Society lymph node map: a CT demonstration. 822 86
The authors used chest computed tomography to determine the distribution of pulmonary lymphadenopathy in 40 patients with sarcoidosis. Using the American
Thoracic
Society lymph node map, the number and distribution of significant lymph nodes was calculated. Overall, lymphadenopathy was identified in 39 of the 40 patients. Mediastinal adenopathy was present in 38 patients, and hilar adenopathy was present in 27. Commonly involved
nodal
stations were 4R, 5, 7, 10R, 11R, and 11L, and little involvement was seen in stations 1, 6, and 14. An understanding of the common sites of adenopathy in sarcoidosis is useful when assessing adenopathy in patients without a known diagnosis.
...
PMID:Distribution of thoracic lymphadenopathy in sarcoidosis using computed tomography. 1021 Apr 84
The purpose of this study was to investigate the utility of 18fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) coincidence detection position emission tomography (CDET) in the evaluation of metastatic mediastinal lymph nodes in patients with potentially operable non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). A prospective study was performed in thirty patients with newly suspected NSCLC.
Thoracic
computed tomography (CT), FDG CDET, and invasive surgical staging were performed in patients. Blinded prospective interpretation was performed for each test and compared to pathological staging obtained by mediastinoscopy and/or by thoracotomy. Patients were followed for six months to detect occult metastases. The sensitivity and specificity of CDET for the detection of mediaStinal lymph nodes were 75% and 94.4% respectively. The corresponding value for CT were 50% and 80.9%. Three patients with N1 disease were classified as N0 by CDET. With regard to definitive surgical node staging, CDET could identify
nodal
disease in 26 patients and CT only in 18 patients (n = 30). FDG full-ring positron emission tomography (PET) is the most accurate non-invasive method for the detection and staging of lung cancer. In addition, FDG CDET shows high accuracy for the detectability of pulmonary lesions with a diameter at least 2 cm and the evaluation of lymph node in NSCLC.
...
PMID:[Value of 18FDG-CDET in the evaluation of operable bronchial cancer]. 1192 80
The aim of this report was to evaluate the effectiveness of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) in staging, diagnosis, and treatment of lung cancer. Fifty-two patients were scheduled for mediastinal lymph node VATS biopsy at the Oncologic
Thoracic
Surgery Department of the National Cancer Institute in Milan. Fifty patients underwent lymph
nodal
thoracoscopic biopsy (96%), whereas for the other 2 patients, histologic diagnosis was done by pleural metastatic nodule thoracoscopic biopsy (4%). We performed 17 lymph
nodal
biopsies in level 5 (33%), 14 in level 6 (27%), 12 in level 7 (23%), and 7 in level 8 (13%). No postoperative complications were observed, and 19 subjects (36%) underwent open lung resection. The histologic diagnosis was adenocarcinoma in 25 cases (48%), epidermoid carcinoma in 14 (27%), microcytoma in 9 (17%), and giant-cell lung carcinoma in 4 (8%); 10 patients were at stage I (19%), 9 at stage II (17%), 31 at stage III (60%), and 2 at stage IV (4%). The use of VATS allowed diagnosis of the suspected involved mediastinal lymph nodes in lung cancer patients and obviated the need for painful thoracotomy, enabling accurate staging and thus selection of the optimal treatment.
...
PMID:Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery for diagnosis, staging, and management of lung cancer with suspected mediastinal lymphadenopathy. 1194 96
Early stage, medically inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer is a treatable disease. A thorough clinical work-up is necessary to optimize management for this group of patients.
Thoracic
radiation therapy has been used for such patients with achievement of durable local control and prolonged survival. To improve upon the results of standard fractionation radiation therapy, novel approaches are needed. Dose escalation may further enhance local tumor control and survival rates. Efforts to minimize irradiation to normal lung parenchyma are necessary. Multiple strategies to optimize the therapeutic ratio are being investigated. Elimination of elective
nodal
irradiation may reduce late toxicity of treatment but may compromise locoregional control. Other strategies, such as intensity-modulated radiation therapy with dose volume histograms will help minimize lung parenchyma irradiation, which will reduce the probability of radiation pneumonitis. Chemotherapy appears to play a minimal role in the treatment of inoperable limited disease, but researchers continue to conduct investigational trials with active chemotherapeutic agents in the hopes of reducing local and distant tumor failures.
...
PMID:Inoperable localized stage I and stage II non-small-cell lung cancer. 1205 90
A case of anthracosis of the esophagus is reported. The patient was a previously healthy 69-year-old Japanese woman. A black and slightly elevated lesion was detected in her esophagus by upper gastroesophageal fiberoscopic examination. Endoscopically, the lesion looked like malignant melanoma.
Thoracic
esophagotomy was then performed. Histological examination revealed a pigmented lesion beneath the mucosal epithelial layer. The lesion consisted of an aggregation of histiocytes containing an abundance of tiny black pigments. A few mature lymphocytes and plasma cells were also evident in the periphery of the lesion. Histologically, these findings looked like lymph nodes in the pulmonary hilus; however, no lymph
nodal
structure was evident in the esophageal wall. Traction diverticula were also noted in the pigmented lesion. The patient has remained well without disease for 9 months since the surgery. Although anthracosis is a rare condition in the esophagus, the present case gave warning to pathologists and clinicians that it does indeed occur. Endoscopists and pathologists should differentiate anthracosis from malignant melanoma because the treatment and outcome are quite different for each.
...
PMID:Esophageal anthracosis: lesion mimicking malignant melanoma. 1216 9
Epidural clonidine produces hypotension, bradycardia and sympatholysis. We studied the dose-effects of thoracic epidural and intravenous clonidine (1 to 8 microg/kg) on cardiac sympathetic nerve activity (CSNA), hemodynamics and intracardiac conduction in cats anesthetized with alpha-chloralose. Mean arterial pressure was decreased with epidural clonidine doses above 2 microg/kg, and to a greater extent with 4 microg/kg than 8 microg/kg. Sinus heart rate, Wenckebach atrial rate and CSNA were significantly decreased and corrected sinus node recovery time and Atrium-His interval were significantly prolonged with doses above 2 microg/kg. Vagotomy induced no significant change in these parameters.
Thoracic
epidural clonidine doses above 2 microg/kg caused a similar extent of sympatholysis. Less of CSNA decrease and hemodynamic changes by intravenous clonidine suggested that sympatholysis caused by epidural clonidine was primarily mediated by spinal mechanism, although hemodynamic changes were influenced by clonidine systemically redistributed from epidural space. Vagal facilitation played no role in suppression of the sinoatrial and AV
nodal
functions.
...
PMID:Dose-related attenuation of cardiac sympathetic nerve activity and intracardiac conduction with thoracic epidural clonidine in alpha-chloralose-anesthetized cats. 1237 97
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