Cases reported "Acute Disease"

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1/301. Obstructive jaundice and acute cholangitis due to papillary stenosis.

    Papillary stenosis is characterized by fixed fibrosis leading to structural outflow obstruction and it is usually secondary to inflammation and fibrosis from the chronic passage of gallstones, episodes of acute pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, sclerosing cholangitis, peptic ulcer disease, and cholesterolosis. However, obstructive jaundice with or without acute cholangitis which leads the physician to suspect the presence of malignancy as a cause is a rare manifestation of papillary stenosis. We report here a case of papillary stenosis presenting with obstructive jaundice and acute cholangitis. The lesion was so difficult to exclude the presence of malignancy preoperatively and intraoperatively that a pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy was performed. Histologic examination of the resected specimen revealed fibrosis, adenomatoid ductal hyperplasia, and mild chronic inflammation of the papilla of Vater and distal common bile duct.
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ranking = 1
keywords = ductal
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2/301. Peripheral clear cell cholangiocarcinoma: a rare histologic variant.

    We present the case of a 50-year-old diabetic male who underwent open cholecystectomy for acute gangrenous cholecystitis. At the time of exploration, a 1.5-cm mass was found peripherally in the right lobe of his liver, and an incisional biopsy was performed. Microscopic examination revealed a distinct overgrowth of clear cells in an acinar pattern, with tumor cells emerging directly from bile ducts. The tumor cells were periodic acid-Schiff reactive and diastase resistant, indicating the presence of mucin. No bile canaliculi were demonstrated by immunostaining with carcinoembryonic antigen. CT scans of the chest and abdomen were otherwise normal. Based on these microscopic, immunohistochemical, and clinical data, a diagnosis of clear cell cholangiocarcinoma was established. The patient later underwent reexploration and generous hepatic wedge resection. He did well postoperatively and is free of disease after 12 months.
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ranking = 14.946835382333
keywords = carcinoma
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3/301. Pulmonary lymphangitis carcinomatosa and acute pancreatitis: a rare presentation of choledochal cyst.

    Pulmonary lymphangitis carcinomatosa is an unusual cause of death in a young adult. This case describes an apparently healthy young woman who presented with severe acute pancreatitis, which is a recognized complication of a choledochal cyst. autopsy examination revealed advanced malignancy with poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma penetrating the wall of the choledochal cyst and metastatic adenocarcinoma in the lymph nodes, lungs and kidneys. This case emphasises the unusual presentation of a choledochal cyst with acute pancreatitis and the aggressive nature of malignancy associated with this congenital anomaly.
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ranking = 20.925569535266
keywords = carcinoma
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4/301. Acute subdural hematoma and pachymeningitis carcinomatosa: case report.

    Subdural hematomas may affect 0.4-5 p. 100 of patients with cancer, because of predisposing risk factors or because of the cancer itself. The most likely association is with hematological cancer with coagulative disorders. An association with pachymeningitis carcinomatosa is less likely. In this instance the subdural hematoma is due to a neoplastic obstruction of dural vein with subdural engorgement and hemorrhage or subdural effusion. We report a case in which an acute neurological deterioration due to a subdural hematoma disclosed a dural metastasis from a breast cancer operated four years earlier and present a literature review.
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ranking = 14.946835382333
keywords = carcinoma
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5/301. Pancreatitis associated with Crohn's disease: a premalignant state for cystadenocarcinoma of pancreas?

    We report a 74-yr-old woman with Crohn's disease and acute pancreatitis who, 3 yr after resolution of the latter, developed cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas. No drug, toxin, or other etiologies including contiguous duodenal involvement were identified as responsible for the pancreatitis, suggesting that pancreatitis was an extraintestinal manifestation of her Crohn's disease. Could Crohn's-associated pancreatitis be a premalignant state for cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas?
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ranking = 17.936202458799
keywords = carcinoma
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6/301. Multiple basal cell carcinomas in a patient with acute myeloid leukaemia and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia.

    skin cancer is a well-recognized risk of prolonged immunosuppression, for example, following renal transplantation. These tumours contrast with idiopathic lesions in that squamous cell, rather than basal cell carcinomas usually predominate. We report a Caucasian female who developed multiple basal cell carcinomas following protracted cytotoxic therapy for acute myeloid leukaemia and subsequently chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. No other clinical risk factors nor relevant polymorphisms of genes encoding for detoxifying enzymes were identified. Immune suppression is a well-recognized cause of multiple skin tumours, the most striking increase usually being of squamous cell carcinomas. We believe this woman is representative of a subgroup of immunosuppressed patients who, for as yet poorly understood reasons, have a predisposition to basal cell, rather than squamous cell carcinoma accrual.
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ranking = 23.914936611732
keywords = carcinoma
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7/301. Wischnewski ulcers and acute pancreatitis in two hospitalized patients with cirrhosis, portal vein thrombosis, and hypothermia.

    Accidental hypothermia has been described in the forensic literature but reports of occurrence in hospitalized patients are rare. Associated anatomic lesions include acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis and characteristic acute gastric ulcers termed Wischnewski ulcers. We report here two patients with cirrhosis and ascites; one also had hepatocellular carcinoma. portal vein thrombosis, acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis and Wischnewski ulcers were present in both. The clinical records documented hypothermia that progressed over several days. temperature nadirs of 31.0 degrees C (87.8 degrees F) and 32.2 degrees C (90.0 degrees F) were recorded in each patient, respectively, one day before death, although each transiently reached temperatures that did not register on standard monitoring devices. This is the first report that chronicles antemortem body temperatures in hypothermic patients with Wischnewski ulcers and pancreatitis at autopsy. Also, the association of these findings with portal vein thrombosis and cirrhosis has not been previously described. We discuss this constellation of findings with regard to possible mechanistic interrelations.
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ranking = 2.9893670764665
keywords = carcinoma
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8/301. Acute lower extremity paralysis following radiation therapy for cervical cancer.

    BACKGROUND: Acute lower extremity paralysis secondary to lumbosacral plexopathy is a rare but severe complication that may follow pelvic radiotherapy for cervical cancer. CASE: A 49-year-old female with newly diagnosed stage IIIB cervical cancer developed progressive bilateral lower extremity paralysis and pelvic pain only 10 weeks following completion of radiation therapy for cervical cancer with no evidence of metastasis or progression of disease. Her bladder and bowel function were not affected. Following extensive workup, the most likely etiology was presumed radiation-induced lumbosacral plexopathy. CONCLUSION: Although metastatic carcinoma is more commonly the reason for progressive lower extremity weakness with pelvic pain in women with advanced cervical cancer, radiation-induced lumbosacral plexopathy, a rare but devastating complication, may be the cause. diagnosis is by exclusion.
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ranking = 2.9893670764665
keywords = carcinoma
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9/301. Acute leukemia in advanced ovarian carcinoma after treatment with alkylating agents.

    Two cases of advanced ovarian carcinoma treated with chlorambucil and terminating in acute leukemia are presented and the literature reviewed. The first patient was diagnosed by laparotomy as having Stage III ovarian carcinoma, and total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-ophorectomy were performed. After 7 years and 2 months of chemotherapy, acute myeloblastic leukemia was diagnosed, and the patient expired 4 months later. At autopsy no residual ovarian tumor was found. The second patient had a right oophorectomy after the diagnosis of Stage III ovarian carcinoma had been made. After 5 years and 9 months of chemotherapy she developed acute myelomonocytic leukemia and expired 2 months later, with residual ovarian tumor present on autopsy. The benefits of surgical reexploration in occasional cases of good clinical remission after chemotherapy are discussed in view of potential carcinogenicity of cytostatic agents.
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ranking = 20.925569535266
keywords = carcinoma
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10/301. Carcinocythemia (carcinoma cell leukemia). An acute leukemia-like picture due to metastatic carcinoma cells.

    observation of a unique population of cells on a Wright-stained blood smear of a patient with metastatic breast carcinoma prompted a study to determine their origin. The primary carcinoma contained a marker, the presence of "signet cells." These were demonstrated in direct peripheral smears and buffy coat preparation of peripheral blood and confirmed histochemically by showing positive periodic acid-Schiff, alpha-napthol and beta-glucuronidase reactions. "Carcinocythemia" is suggested as a name for this unusual process observed over a six month period. Studies of the patient's immunocompetence, of circulating cell surface immunoglobulins and karyotype analysis were made. Postmortem examination revealed retroperitoneal fibrosis, splenic atrophy and extensive metastatic carcinoma but no evidence of leukemia. The cells will be contrasted to those seen in a second patient who appeared to have acute myelocytic leukemia complicating extensive cancer involving the bone marrow. The observations suggest that a leukemia-like blood picture due to circulating cancer cells may occur during the course of metastatic breast carcinoma.
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ranking = 35.872404917598
keywords = carcinoma
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