Cases reported "Lung Neoplasms"

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1/67. October 1998--61 year old male with brain tumor and oral, lung, and palpebral masses.

    In Jan. 97 a gliosarcoma was diagnosed in a 61-year- old man after a 6-month history with neurological deficits. A total physical examination, laboratory tests, chest x-ray and abdominal ultrasound scanning revealed no gross abnormalities. Surgery was followed by brain radiation therapy and 6 months later there were metastases to the oral cavity, right palpebra and both lungs. The histological findings of the oral and palpebral metastases revealed only the sarcomatous component. We are aware of 15 cases of gliosarcoma with extraneural metastases, and in 4 of these, the metastases contained only the sarcomatous component. We believe that our case represents the fifth case of pure sarcomatous metastases.
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2/67. Infantile myofibromatosis: a case study and review of literature.

    Infantile myofibromatosis is an unusual condition generally presenting in the newborn period. The case being reported is that of a female newborn who had multiple lesions that involved skin, subcutaneous tissue, skeletal muscles, bone, and lungs. The disease was diagnosed because of the easily palpable skin tumors and subcutaneous nodules that were obvious immediately after birth. The diagnosis was established by histopathological examination of one nodule that showed a spindle-celled mesenchymatogenic lesion demonstrating the morphological and immuno-phenotype characteristics of myofibroblastic differentiation. The histologic picture, combined with the clinical manifestations and the imaging findings, are consistent with infantile myofibromatosis. The physical condition of the newborn was excellent and remains so six months later. The tumors of the skin and the subcutaneous nodules have gradually regressed without therapy. At the age of six months, four (4) nodules are palpable; the infant is under continuous observation.
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3/67. Occult pulmonary synovial sarcoma confirmed by molecular techniques.

    We report a unique case of a minute, occult synovial sarcoma of the lung detected intraoperatively during a pneumothorax repair in a 17-year-old boy. No alternative primary site could be detected upon complete body imaging studies and physical examinations. The diagnosis was confirmed by demonstration of the characteristic SYT/SSX gene fusion by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) performed upon rna extracted from the paraffin block of the biopsy. This case demonstrates the utility of this technique in diagnostic pathology.
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4/67. The sign of Leser-Trelat in a case of adenocarcinoma of the lung.

    This is what we believe to be the first report of the sign of Leser-Trelat in association with occult adenocarcinoma of the lung. The sign of Leser-Trelat is proposed as a sign of possible occult malignancy, despite various suggestions to the contrary. Also, it is suggested that a tumor-produced humoral factor (eg, transforming growth factor-alpha [TGF-alpha]) could be responsible for both the acute eruption of the monomorphous seborrheic keratoses and the nearly concomitant development of acanthosis nigricans, which occurred in our case. The possible distinction between a hyperplastic and a neoplastic origin of various types of seborrheic keratosis is discussed in relation to this hypothetical humoral factor. In addition, we suggest a refinement of the definition of the sign of Leser-Trelat and discuss the use of "sign of Leser-Trelat" and "syndrome of Leser-Trelat" in relation to physical findings. All patients with the sign of Leser-Trelat should undergo a thorough evaluation for occult malignancy.
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5/67. Primary squamous cell carcinoma of the breast during lactation: a case report.

    A case of primary squamous cell carcinoma of the breast during lactation is reported. The patient was a 32-year-old woman, in post-partum lactating 18 months after delivery, who was referred to our hospital following detection of a lump in her left breast during physical examination in mass screening for breast cancer. The tumor, palpated in the upper outer quadrant of the left breast, was firm, well-defined and 2.8 x 2.6 cm in size. Ultrasonograms identified an irregular-shaped hypoechoic lesion and mammograms revealed a well-defined, circumscribed tumor. Based on these findings, breast cancer was suspected and an excisional biopsy was performed. The resected specimen was a firm, solid and circumscribed tumor with central hemorrhage. Microscopic findings demonstrated that the tumor consisted of an invasive ductal carcinoma with marked squamous metaplasia, such as keratinization and squamo-columnar junction. breast-conserving surgery was performed and no lymph node involvement was noted. Both estrogen and progesterone receptors of the tumor were negative. Generally, the size of both squamous cell carcinoma and carcinoma during the lactation period tends to be larger than ordinary carcinomas. In this case, the cancerous lesion was detected at a relatively early stage. Although the cancerous lesion was detected at a relatively early stage and no lymph node involvement was noted, lung metastases occurred within 12 months of the surgery. Malignant potential is generally considered to be high in cases of squamous cell carcinoma of the breast with lactation and thus intensive treatment potentially resulting in severe side effects was considered to be necessary for this patient.
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6/67. Intrapulmonary mature teratoma.

    Intrapulmonary teratoma is reported in a 22-year-old male. A chest X-ray in a physical examination showed a round shadow in the left hilum of a 22-year-old man who, on admission, reported slight malaise and a decrease in body weight. Computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging of the chest showed a heterogeneously dense cystic lesion. The preoperative diagnosis was anterior mediastinal teratoma, and the tumor was located in the anterior segment of the left upper lobe after thoracotomy. Segmentectomy of the left upper division showed a 4.0 x 3.5 cm tumor diagnosed as an intrapulmonary mature teratoma--the 27th such case reported in the English-language literature. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first intrapulmonary teratoma involving magnetic resonance imaging.
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7/67. A case report of advanced male breast cancer with an objective response to tamoxifen treatment.

    A 70-year-old man presented with a firm tumor in his right breast first noticed eight years ago.The tumor had enlarged gradually and had produced an ulcer with bleeding. On physical examination, a huge tumor entirely occupied the right breast and extensively had infiltrated the chest wall.Chest X-ray and CT showed massive pleural effusion and multiple small nodular lesions in the lung. Invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast was diagnosed by incisional biopsy,confirming advanced breast cancer with lung metastases and bilateral pleural effusion(T4cN2M1, Stage IV). Because ER and PgR levels were 110 fmol/mg and 190 fmol/mg, respectively, and because his general condition was poor, we selected medical treatment with tamoxifen(TAM). Thirty-two weeks later, the tumor had showed pronounced reduction with scarring. The patient underwent local excision of the scar tissue. The quality of life of the patient was favorably improved and no severe adverse events were observed. The tumor in the chest wall recurred two months after the end of TAM treatment, possibly because the patient did not accept continuous TAM therapy. The patient died from complications of brain metastasis 32 months after the start of TAM treatment. We report a rare case of advanced male breast cancer and on the effectiveness of continuous TAM treatment.
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8/67. cementoplasty and the oncologic population.

    The first and only description of percutaneous cementoplasty, to date, has been described in the French medical literature in 1994. In this series of 12 cases, radiologists successfully instilled a cement derivative into the acetabulum under fluoroscopic control. As in these cases, the major indication for cementoplasty is to provide pain control and stabilization of an osteolytic lesion. Potential complications include physical or thermal damage to the adjacent neurovascular structures, either during needle positioning or from cement leakage, respectively. Although no absolute contraindications exist, one should proceed cautiously in patients with coagulopathies. Results may be suboptimal as well in patients with pathologic fractures.
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keywords = physical
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9/67. Collusion in doctor-patient communication about imminent death: an ethnographic study.

    OBJECTIVE: To discover and explore the factors that result in the "false optimism about recovery" observed in patients with small cell lung cancer. DESIGN: A qualitative observational (ethnographic) study in 2 stages over 4 years. SETTING: lung diseases ward and outpatient clinic in a university hospital in the netherlands. PARTICIPANTS: 35 patients with small cell lung cancer. RESULTS: False optimism about recovery usually developed during the first course of chemotherapy and was most prevalent when the cancer could no longer be seen on x-ray films. This optimism tended to vanish when the tumor recurred, but it could develop again, though to a lesser extent, during further courses of chemotherapy. patients gradually found out the facts about their poor prognosis, partly by their physical deterioration and partly through contact with fellow patients in a more advanced stage of the illness who were dying. False optimism about recovery was the result of an association between physicians' activism and patients' adherence to the treatment calendar and to the "recovery plot," which allowed them to avoid acknowledging explicitly what they should and could know. The physician did and did not want to pronounce a "death sentence," and the patient did and did not want to hear it. CONCLUSION: solutions to the problem of collusion between physician and patient require an active, patient-oriented approach by the physician. Perhaps solutions have to be found outside the physician-patient relationship itself--for example, by involving "treatment brokers."
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10/67. Gastric cancer with Virchow's and multiple lung metastases showing a remarkable response to preoperative chemotherapy: report of a case.

    We report herein a rare case with advanced gastric cancer combined with group 4 lymph node and lung metastases that responded remarkably to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. A 65-year-old man was found to have a well-differentiated type 3 gastric cancer that invaded the duodenum locally and was accompanied with Virchow's, para-aortic lymph nodes, and multiple lung metastases based on physical, endoscopic, and radiological examinations. In addition, his carbohydrate antigen (CA) 19-9 was elevated to 3965U/ml, and CA72-4 to 46U/ml. Prior to surgery, he was treated with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU; 500mg/body per day) and low-dose cisplatinum (CDDP; 10mg/body per day) as neoadjuvant chemotherapy for 6 weeks. As a result, a partial response was obtained in all lesions, and CA19-9 and CA72-4 decreased to 463U/ml and 9.4U/ml, respectively. Four weeks after the completion of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, a distal gastrectomy was performed, and a histopathological examination of the resected specimen showed a grade 2 response to chemotherapy. Immunohistochemically, the thymidylate synthase expression level was very low in the tumor tissues, which might account for the good response to the combination chemotherapy with 5-FU and CDDP observed in the present case.
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