Cases reported "Lymphatic Metastasis"

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1/364. Clinical value of protein-bound fucose in patients with carcinoma and other diseases.

    Protein-bound fucose content in sera from normal persons and patients with various malignant and non-malignant diseases was measured and statistically analyzed. Normal serum gave a mean value of 6.84 /- 0.13 mg/100 ml, and rarely exceeded 9 mg/100 ml. Although no significant difference was found between sexes, there was a tendency of fucose content to decrease in older persons. It was noted that more than 90% of cancer-bearing patients have significantly higher level than critical value (9 mg/100 ml), while only 8.7% of patients with benign tumor showed positive result. These results were not limited to special organs but in common to all cases studied. The elevation of serum fucose content in malignant tumor was well correlated with its stages of progression, though the levels were less significant in early and in rather locally restricted breast and thyroid cancer. Serial postoperative follow-up study showed that the levels in serum fucose content was a useful parameter for judging the effectiveness of therapy and the prognosis of the patient. The fucose content in malignant tumor tissue and metastasized lymph node appeared to be significantly elevated than that in normal tissue. The practical usage and limitation of the fucose value in various diseases, together with a possible source of serum fucose were discussed.
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keywords = thyroid
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2/364. Diagnosing invasive cystic hypersecretory duct carcinoma of the breast with fine needle aspiration cytology. A case report.

    BACKGROUND: Cystic hypersecretory duct carcinoma (CHC) of the breast, first described in 1984, is a rare variant of duct carcinoma. Histologically it is characterized by the formation of dilated ducts and cysts containing an eosinophilic secretory product resembling thyroid colloid. The lining epithelium of the cysts atypically proliferates to form intraductal carcinoma. Only four cases of invasive cystic hypersecretory carcinoma have been reported. CASE: We present a case of invasive CHC with tumor emboli in many lymphatic spaces and axillary nodal metastases. The lesion was also evaluated by fine needle aspiration. Direct smears with Papanicolaou stain were highly cellular and had abundant, intensely staining, orange-to-gray-green thyroid colloid-like material. epithelial cells, showing a variety of cellular patterns, were indistinguishable from usual ductal carcinoma cells. These cytologic findings may be characteristic enough to suggest cystic hypersecretory carcinoma. CONCLUSION: The cytologic features of CHC are distinctive and correlate with histology. This was the first presentation of colloidlike secretory material in cytologic material with Papanicolaou stain in such a case. Invasive CHC tends to have aggressive behavior. Cystic hypersecretory hyperplasia coexisted in this case.
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keywords = thyroid
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3/364. Parasitic nodule of the thyroid in a patient with Graves' disease.

    We report a case of a parasitic nodule of the thyroid in a patient with Graves' disease, which mimicked a lymph node metastasis from a primary occult thyroid carcinoma. The patient was a 67-year-old Japanese woman with a past history of subtotal thyroidectomy for Graves' disease, who was referred to our hospital because of a right cervical mass. A lymph node-like lesion measuring 1.5 cm in diameter was palpable, distinct from the remnant of the right thyroid lobe. Thyroid scintigraphy using 123I-Na revealed a hot lesion at the upper lateral portion of the right thyroid lobe, and this was resected. Microscopically, the mass showed thyroid follicles with lymphocytic infiltration and lymphoid follicles. Clear ground glass nuclei, nuclear grooving and intranuclear inclusions were not observed. No morphological evidence of the lymph node was found in the mass by reticulin staining. Parasitic nodules of the thyroid in patients with Graves' disease may mimic a metastatic carcinoma of the thyroid.
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ranking = 12.18343797666
keywords = thyroid, nodule
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4/364. Dendritic cell sarcoma of the thyroid.

    BACKGROUND: Follicular dendritic cell sarcoma (FDCS) arises from nonlymphatic antigen-presenting cells found in lymph node B-cell follicles. This extremely rare tumor, which usually arises in lymph nodes, does occur in extranodal head and neck sites such as the tonsil and soft palate. methods: A retrospective review of the patient followed at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center from 1993 to the present was performed. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first reported case of an FDCS of the thyroid. A review of the literature provides useful information to aid in detection, treatment, and outcome of this unusual soft tissue malignancy.
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ranking = 5
keywords = thyroid
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5/364. Gastric cancer with sarcoid reactions in the regional lymph nodes, the stomach wall, and the splenic parenchyma: report of a case.

    A 66-year-old man was referred to our institute for investigation of heartburn and epigastralgia. Endoscopic examination demonstrated a type 4' gastric cancer which occupied the whole stomach. At laparotomy, multiple small nodules were found in the spleen which were diagnosed as metastases of the gastric cancer. Thus, total gastrectomy with distal pancreatectomy, splenectomy, cholecystectomy, and left adrenalectomy, combined with D4 lymph node dissection, was performed. Microscopic examination of the tumor revealed tubular and mucinous adenocarcinoma which invaded the muscularis propria. Sarcoid reactions were observed in the submucosa adjacent to the carcinoma tissue. Only one lymph node from station no. 8a demonstrated tumor metastasis, while those from station nos. 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, and 16 revealed sarcoid reactions without tumor metastases. Subsequently, the multiple small nodules that had been presumed to be splenic metastases at laparotomy were found to be sarcoid reactions similar to those seen in the submucosa and regional lymph nodes. Since no skin or ocular lesions indicative of systemic sarcoidosis were seen in this patient, a diagnosis of advanced gastric cancer associated with sarcoid reactions was established. To our knowledge, there have been no previous reports regarding an association between sarcoid reactions in the spleen and gastric cancer.
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ranking = 0.061145992220141
keywords = nodule
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6/364. Tall cell variant of papillary carcinoma arising from ectopic thyroid tissue in the trachea.

    Ectopic thyroid tissue within the submucosa of the trachea is a rare cause of upper airway obstruction. Primary neoplasms arising from such thyroid nests are rare. This report describes a case of tall cell variant of papillary carcinoma arising from ectopic thyroid tissue in the trachea.
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ranking = 7
keywords = thyroid
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7/364. hyperthyroidism due to papillary carcinoma of the thyroid--a case report.

    A rare case of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid producing hyperthyroidism is presented. A young patients presented seven years after a thyroid operation with metastatic disease in the cervical lymph nodes and a history of deteriorating vision in the left eye. He also had a lesion in the base of the skull which could not be established to be metastasis from the thyroid cancer. There was clinical and biochemical evidence of hyperthyroidism. Radionuclide scan revealed uptake in the residual thyroid tissue and patchy uptake by the cervical lymph nodes. The patient underwent a complete thyroidectomy and radical neck dissection of the left side and 'berry-picking' of the lymph nodes on the right side. Although the patient became euthyroid post-operatively, his general condition deteriorated and he rapidly lost vision in both eyes before any ablative therapy could be instituted for the tumour in the base of the skull. The patient was lost to follow-up.
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ranking = 16
keywords = thyroid
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8/364. paraneoplastic syndromes of leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, and hypercalcemia associated with squamous cell carcinoma.

    paraneoplastic syndromes including leukocytosis, thrombocytosis and hypercalcemia are occasionally seen in patients suffering from progressive malignant disorders. Recent studies have revealed the production of several humoral factors by tumor cells and normal splenic cells of tumor-bearing patients to be the major cause of these reactions. granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF), parathyroid hormone-related peptide, interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) have been implicated. We describe a 58-year-old Japanese man with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) on the left sole, which developed in a deep linear scar after a train crash. He developed pulmonary and lymph node metastases, then leukocytosis (57,110/mm3 with 95% neutrophilia), thrombocytosis (86.3 x 10(4)/mm3), and hypercalcemia (7.0 mEq/1), and finally cachexia, followed by death. serum G-CSF, IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, and TNF-beta were determined; revealing G-CSF and IL-1 beta levels were above the upper limits of their normal ranges at 39.2 pg/ml and 4.63 pg/ml, respectively. It is probable that these humoral factors were partially responsible for the paraneoplastic syndromes induced by the cutaneous SCC with metastasis in the present case.
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ranking = 1
keywords = thyroid
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9/364. Thyroid papillary carcinoma arising in ectopic thyroid tissue within a branchial cleft cyst.

    A case of papillary carcinoma arising in ectopic thyroid tissue within a branchial cleft cyst is described. A 46-year-old woman presented with a 2.0 x 2.0 cm mass in her left lateral neck. The excised mass showed a cystic lesion with a thyroid papillary carcinoma. Following a lateral cervical cystectomy, subsequent thyroid gland and lymph nodes dissections were performed. Pathological examination showed an adenomatous goiter and no primary carcinoma in the thyroid gland, as well as metastatic papillary carcinoma in the lymph nodes. Two cases of thyroid papillary carcinoma arising in ectopic thyroid tissue within a branchial cyst have been reported previously, but no lymph node metastases were recognized. The first case of papillary carcinoma arising in ectopic thyroid tissue within a branchial cleft cyst, and accompanied by lymph node metastasis is presented.
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ranking = 11
keywords = thyroid
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10/364. Occult sporadic medullary microcarcinoma with lymph node metastases.

    A sporadic form of medullary occult microcarcinoma was cytologically diagnosed, by fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB), on metastatic cervical lymph nodes. The cytologic specimens were partially smeared and partially zinc-formalin-fixed, so that a microinclusion clot for immunohistochemical studies would be possible. The reactivity to calcitonin of neoplastic cells obtained from metastatic cervical lymph nodes supported the search for a thyroid tumor, which only a careful echographic study revealed. Under sonographic guidance, FNAB on a 0.5-cm hypoechoid nodule was performed. The smears were diagnostic of medullary carcinoma. A total thyroidectomy with node dissection was made. Diagn. Cytopathol. 1999;21:203-206.
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ranking = 2.0305729961101
keywords = thyroid, nodule
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