Cases reported "Adenoma"

Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/206. Pituitary macroadenoma manifesting as an isolated fourth nerve palsy.

    PURPOSE: To describe an unusual ophthalmic manifestation of a pituitary adenoma. methods: Case report. RESULTS: A 32-year-old man had left supraorbital and frontal headaches and new-onset vertical diplopia. Examination showed a left fourth nerve palsy and increased vertical fusional amplitudes. magnetic resonance imaging disclosed a sellar mass consistent with a pituitary macroadenoma. CONCLUSION: A pituitary adenoma may rarely manifest with an isolated fourth nerve palsy.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/206. Sudden recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis due to apoplexy of parathyroid adenoma.

    Neoplastic lesions of the parathyroid are rare, and most of these are adenomas. Even rarer is a secondary involvement of the recurrent laryngeal nerve. A case is presented of sudden onset hoarseness in a 64-year-old man caused by acute vocal cord paralysis due to bleeding within an adenoma of the lower right parathyroid gland. Acute onset of vocal cord paralysis is rarely associated with benign processes; the current case is only the second report associated with parathyroid adenoma.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.83333333333333
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/206. Post-traumatic pituitary apoplexy--two case reports.

    A 60-year-old female and a 66-year-old male presented with post-traumatic pituitary apoplexy associated with clinically asymptomatic pituitary macroadenoma manifesting as severe visual disturbance that had not developed immediately after the head injury. Skull radiography showed a unilateral linear occipital fracture. magnetic resonance imaging revealed pituitary tumor with dumbbell-shaped suprasellar extension and fresh intratumoral hemorrhage. Transsphenoidal surgery was performed in the first patient, and the visual disturbance subsided. decompressive craniectomy was performed in the second patient to treat brain contusion and part of the tumor was removed to decompress the optic nerves. The mechanism of post-traumatic pituitary apoplexy may occur as follows. The intrasellar part of the tumor is fixed by the bony structure forming the sella, and the suprasellar part is free to move, so a rotational force acting on the occipital region on one side will create a shearing strain between the intra- and suprasellar part of the tumor, resulting in pituitary apoplexy. Recovery of visual function, no matter how severely impaired, can be expected if an emergency operation is performed to decompress the optic nerves. Transsphenoidal surgery is the most advantageous procedure, as even partial removal of the tumor may be adequate to decompress the optic nerves in the acute stage. Staged transsphenoidal surgery is indicated to achieve total removal later.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.5
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)

4/206. Nonrecurrent laryngeal nerves: anatomic considerations during thyroid and parathyroid surgery.

    PURPOSE: In head and neck surgery, damage to the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) during thyroid surgery is the most common iatrogenic cause of vocal cord paralysis. Identification of the RLNs and meticulous surgical technique can significantly decrease the incidence of this complication. Nonrecurrent RLNs (NRRLNs) are exceedingly rare. Surgeons need to be aware of their position to avoid damage to them. MATERIALS AND methods: A retrospective review of 513 RLN exposures over a 7-year period was performed. RESULTS: Two NRRLNs were encountered, for an incidence of 0.39%. CONCLUSION: NRRLNs are rare. awareness of their existence will prevent the surgeon from accidentally severing one if it is encountered during routine thyroid or parathyroid surgery.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.83333333333333
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)

5/206. Neuromyotonia of the abducens nerve after hypophysectomy and radiation.

    The clinical signs of the rarely encountered ocular neuromyotonia consist of transient involuntary tonic contraction and delayed relaxation of single or multiple extraocular muscles, resulting in episodic diplopia. With a mean time delay of 3.5 years, this motility disorder frequently follows tumor excision or adjuvant radiation near the skull base. Ocular neuromyotonia may reflect inappropriate discharge from oculomotor neurons with unstable cell membranes because of segmental demyelinization by tumor compression and radiation-induced microangiopathy. In the present paper, the authors present the case of a 53-year-old patient with a history of transsphenoidal hypophysectomy and adjuvant radiotherapy, who underwent strabismus surgery for abducens palsy.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.66666666666667
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)

6/206. Severe non-infectious circulatory shock related to hypopituitarism.

    The authors report a case of refractory non-infectious circulatory shock with catecholamine and massive fluid loading-resistant features related to hypopituitarism. A 76-year-old man was admitted for shock after suffering from gastroenteritis for 3 days. He was pale and had sparse axillary and pubic hair and small testes. Right catheterization showed shock with low preload pressure and a low oxygen extraction ratio relevant for septic shock. Ultrasound tomography revealed a distended gallbladder due to a stone without peritoneal effusion. A non-inflammatory hydrops of the gallbladder was removed surgically. No microorganism was isolated. Cerebral computed tomography (CT) scan showed a pituitary mass. In the post-surgical period the shock became uncontrollable. Cortisol replacement therapy was instituted and clinical and hemodynamic improvement occurred after 2 h. Hormonal screening on admission before catecholamine administration showed a major decrease in all the hypothalamic-pituitary hormone concentrations. The patient died on day 15 with multiple organ failure. hypopituitarism, probably owing to pituitary adenoma, was the only disease identified in this case. hormone replacement therapy dramatically improved the clinical and hemodynamic status, although the role of an abdominal sepsis could not be eliminated. Arguments that pituitary hormone deficiency might increase the hemodynamic consequences of adrenal deficiency are discussed.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.031119542153062
keywords = organ
(Clic here for more details about this article)

7/206. Compression of the prechiasmatic optic nerve produces a junctional scotoma.

    PURPOSE: To demonstrate the clinical-radiologic correlation between a junctional scotoma and a focal lesion compressing the prechiasmatic segment of the distal optic nerve. methods: Case report involving a man with a pituitary adenoma. Clinical correlation was determined by reviewing visual field evaluations and magnetic resonance images. RESULTS: The tumor compressed the prechiasmatic segment of the distal optic nerve but not the optic chiasm, producing a junctional scotoma documented by Goldmann and automated perimetry. The visual field defect resolved after neurosurgical decompression of the anterior visual pathway. CONCLUSIONS: A junctional scotoma can be caused by focal as well as large and diffuse lesions injuring the anterior visual pathway, specifically at the junction of the optic nerve and chiasm. This finding supports the existence of Wilbrand fibers.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1.1666666666667
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)

8/206. 'Pyloric gland-type adenoma' arising in heterotopic gastric mucosa of the duodenum, with dysplastic progression of the gastric type.

    'Pyloric gland-type adenoma' is a recently described and very rare entity. We report a case of a pedunculated polyp of the duodenal bulb showing the features of pyloric gland-type adenoma. Heterotopic gastric mucosa was found adjacent to the tumour. Immunohistochemically, the tumour cells at the surface of the polyp showed foveolar-type mucin (M1) while most other tumour cells showed deep gastric mucin (M2), displaying a pattern of differentiation similar to the normal gastric mucosa. The polyp also showed villous or papillary structures with disorganization of gastric differentiation and marked increase of proliferating in foci cells. This is the first case of pyloric gland-type adenoma found to arise in heterotopic gastric mucosa of the duodenum, showing dysplastic progression of the gastric type.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.015559771076531
keywords = organ
(Clic here for more details about this article)

9/206. Metanephric adenoma.

    A 59-year old woman was diagnosed with a tumour in her right kidney. A nephrectomy was performed, and a 45 mm diameter tan-pink coloured tumour was found. microscopy revealed small, dark cells in organized arrays of small round acini and tubules with glomeruloid infoldings. A diagnosis of metanephric adenoma was made. The tumour cells proved diploid on flow cytometry and immunohistochemical staining was positive for CAM 5.2 and AE-3. FISH analysis of three chromosomes did not reveal any abnormal karyotype. It is important to differentiate metanephric adenoma from renal cell carcinoma and adult Wilm's tumour, since it has a benign course.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.015559771076531
keywords = organ
(Clic here for more details about this article)

10/206. Stereotactic radiosurgery, X: clinical isodosimetry of gamma knife versus linear accelerator X-knife for pituitary and acoustic tumours.

    Several review articles have compared gamma unit versus linear accelerator (linac)-based radiosurgery systems, concluding that the dose gradient 'fall-off' at the margin of the target (expressed as the distance between isodoses) is very similar for both techniques as far as single isocentre treatment volumes up to 1.5 cm diameter are concerned, and that the two radiosurgical systems are, in general, comparable. 'Fine tuning' of the gamma unit can be carried out by using multiple isocentre plans, the differential use of small collimator sizes (down to 4 mm) and field weightings, and adroit use of the gamma angle, and selective beam blocking. Multiple isocentre plans, beam modification, restriction of gantry angles and arc lengths, and microcollimation can similarly improve the isodose gradients from linac units. In both instances, the dosimetric advantages occur along selected aspects of the target perimeter border. However, the more frequent use of multiple isocentred 'shots' on the gamma unit achieves greater conformity indices for more complex target volumes, but at the expense of steeper internal dose gradients. We studied two patients with tumours close to or arising from radiosensitive special sensory nerves (optic and cochlear) to compare and contrast fine tuning of the two technologies. In a previously irradiated patient with a pituitary adenoma, the dose gradient achieved at the rostral margin, adjacent to the optic chiasma, was steeper on the gamma unit (due to the concentration of small collimator shots rostrally and beam blocking), which was therefore the dosimetrically preferred technique. In contrast, the vastly smaller internal dose gradient (11% for linac/X-knife versus 100% for Gamma Knife) and the ability to fractionate on the X-knife system, gave a large dosimetric advantage to the X-knife plan in the treatment of an acoustic neuroma, where the intracanalicular component of the cochlear nerve traversed the target volume. This advantage also pertains to the cochlear ramus of the internal auditory (labyrinthine) artery and the facial nerve. Our published work on X-knife radiosurgery of acoustic neuroma has documented improvement of hearing after therapy and may be relevant in this regard. That there are advantages in physical dose distribution and fractionation, producing a reduction in the biological dose in normal tissue, argues for the use of linac technology in acoustic neuromas. Craniopharyngiomas enveloping the optic nerve/chiasma will similarly be better treated by the linac X-knife system. It is apparent that different radiosurgery systems may be indicated in particular neuro-oncological situations.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.66666666666667
keywords = nerve
(Clic here for more details about this article)
| Next ->


Leave a message about 'Adenoma'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.