Cases reported "Genital Neoplasms, Male"

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1/90. Basal cell carcinoma of the scrotum.

    An 80-year-old man with a 7 year history of a slowly enlarging, asymptomatic scrotal nodule is presented. He had a negative history for sexually transmitted disease, trauma to the area, radiotherapy and chemical or arsenic exposure. The lesion was excised with a margin of 0.8 cm of normal skin. Examination of the specimen revealed a basal cell carcinoma.
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ranking = 1
keywords = carcinoma
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2/90. Primary seminal vesicle carcinoma: an immunohistochemical analysis of four cases.

    Primary adenocarcinoma of the seminal vesicles is an extremely rare neoplasm. Because prompt diagnosis and treatment are associated with improved long-term survival, accurate recognition of this neoplasm is important, particularly when evaluating limited biopsy material. immunohistochemistry can be used to rule out neoplasms that commonly invade the seminal vesicles, such as prostatic adenocarcinoma. Previous reports have shown that seminal vesicle adenocarcinoma (SVCA) is negative for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and prostate-specific acid phosphatase (PAP); however, little else is known of its immunophenotype. Consequently, we evaluated the utility of cancer antigen 125 (CA-125) and cytokeratin (CK) subsets 7 and 20 for distinguishing SVCA from other neoplasms that enter the differential diagnosis. Four cases of SVCA-three cases of bladder adenocarcinoma and a rare case of adenocarcinoma arising in a mullerian duct cyst-were immunostained for CA-125, CK7, and CK20. Three of four cases of SVCA were CA-125 positive and CK7 positive. All four cases were CK20 negative. All bladder adenocarcinomas and the mullerian duct cyst adenocarcinoma were CK7 positive and negative for CA-125 and CK20. In addition, CA-125 immunostaining was performed in neoplasms that commonly invade the seminal vesicles, including prostatic adenocarcinoma (n = 40), bladder transitional cell carcinoma (n = 32), and rectal adenocarcinoma (n = 10), and all were negative for this antigen. In conclusion, the present study has shown that the CK7-positive, CK20-negative, CA-125-positive, PSA/PAP-negative immunophenotype of papillary SVCA is unique and can be used in conjunction with histomorphology to distinguish it from other tumors that enter the differential diagnosis, including prostatic adenocarcinoma (CA-125 negative, PSA/PAP positive), bladder transitional cell carcinoma (CK20 positive, CA-125 negative), rectal adenocarcinoma (CA-125 negative, CK7 negative, CK20 positive), bladder adenocarcinoma (CA-125 negative), and adenocarcinoma arising in a mullerian duct cyst (CA-125 negative).
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ranking = 4.4002300987752
keywords = carcinoma, adenocarcinoma
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3/90. Transcatheter snare removal of acute middle cerebral artery thromboembolism: technical case report.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: We describe the case of a patient in whom a snare designed for the removal of foreign bodies was successfully used to retrieve a thromboembolism from the middle cerebral artery. This technique can be used to reestablish blood flow when maximal pharmacological therapies have failed. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 38-year-old man with scrotal squamous cell carcinoma presented with the abrupt onset of left hemiparesis and numbness. Computed tomography of the head showed no hemorrhage or hypodensity, and right middle cerebral artery thrombosis was suspected. INTERVENTION: cerebral angiography demonstrated a near-total occlusion of the right middle cerebral artery at the M1-M2 junction. The administration of intra-arterial urokinase, systemic heparin, and systemic abciximab, and mechanical maceration failed to lyse the clot. A 4-mm goose-neck snare was guided through a microcatheter, and the clot was snared and withdrawn. Immediate postoperative angiography demonstrated the reconstitution of normal flow. Pathological examination of the snared material was consistent with clot. By postoperative Day 5, the patient had regained full strength, except for the fingers of the left hand, which remained moderately weak. Computed tomography demonstrated a right insular and extreme capsular infarct. CONCLUSION: To our knowledge, this is the first reported use of a snare to remove clot in the setting of thromboembolic stroke. As the use of intra-arterial thrombolysis increases, transcatheter snare removal of pharmacologically resistant clot may be considered as a salvage strategy.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = carcinoma
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4/90. Extramammary Paget's disease.

    Extramammary Paget's disease (EMPD) is an uncommon but distinctive tumor. The lesion is defined as an intra-epidermal neoplasm. The lesion may be accompanied by an invasive adenocarcinoma or in situ adenocarcinoma of apocrine glands. Visceral carcinoma may also coexist or develop. Definitive diagnosis requires biopsy of the lesion and immunohistochemical staining. In most cases of noninvasive or minimally invasive EMPD, surgical resection with clear margins and careful follow-up are recommended, since the recurrence rate is high. We review the literature and report two cases of EMPD, one involving the perineal-scrotal area and the other involving the perianal area.
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ranking = 0.69234309211926
keywords = carcinoma, adenocarcinoma
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5/90. A case of giant extramammary Paget's disease of the genital area with squamous-cell carcinoma.

    Extramammary Paget's disease is a primary carcinoma with apocrine differentiation that begins within the epidermis. Extramammary Paget's disease and squamous-cell carcinoma (SCC) have different neoplastic origins and are different both clinically and histologically. Until now the concurrence of extramammary Paget's disease and SCC in the same area has not been reported to our knowledge. We report on a 76-year-old man with extramammary Paget's disease affecting a large region of the genital area with SCC within the same area. A skin biopsy specimen showed the coexistence of typical Paget's disease and highly differentiated SCC invading the dermis. Immunohistochemical staining of both cell types was completely different.
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ranking = 1.2
keywords = carcinoma
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6/90. An unusual cause of irritable urinary bladder symptoms.

    A metastasis from a renal cell carcinoma to a seminal vesicle is extremely rare. This pattern of metastatic disease has been reported once previously in the Japanese literature. We describe a patient with irritability symptoms of the urine bladder and involuntary loss of stool caused by obstruction of the bladder by a large metastasis from a renal cell carcinoma to the seminal vesicle. The mode of diagnosis and treatment of this patient are described.
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ranking = 0.4
keywords = carcinoma
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7/90. Extramammary Paget's disease of scrotum.

    We describe 4 cases of extramammary Paget's disease of the scrotum with underlying invasive carcinoma from 1997 to 1999. Three patients had metastatic inguinal lymphadenopathy. The delay in diagnosis was significant (mean 1 year). The diagnosis was made by skin biopsy in all patients. Histologically, intraepidermal cells with enlarged vesicular nuclei and vacuolated cytoplasm, which was mucin positive, were found. The mainstay of treatment is wide surgical excision, but positive margins remain a major problem. Other modes of treatment have been advocated but the efficacy for invasive disease is low. The key to successful control of the disease is therefore a high index of suspicion and early diagnosis.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = carcinoma
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8/90. Primary squamous cell carcinoma of the seminal vesicle.

    A 69-year-old man with primary squamous cell carcinoma of the seminal vesicle was successfully treated. The patient presented with complaints of gross hematuria and difficulty in urination. Transrectal ultrasonography revealed a cystic mass behind the bladder, and solid tumorous lesions were visualized in the cyst wall by magnetic resonance imaging. The cystic mass was surgically excised and was verified as the enlarged seminal vesicle with concomitant squamous cell carcinoma. The histopathologic diagnosis was squamous cell carcinoma in the seminal vesicle. Postoperatively, 50 Gy of external beam radiation was targeted to the whole pelvic cavity, and the patient was alive without recurrence 2.5 years after surgery. No other neoplasm was discovered in the body.
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ranking = 1.4
keywords = carcinoma
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9/90. Squamous cell carcinoma arising from a seminal vesicular cyst: possible relationship between chronic inflammation and tumor development.

    A case of squamous cell carcinoma arising within an acquired seminal vesicular cyst is described. A 61-year-old man was hospitalized because of hemospermia and dysuria. Under the diagnosis of a left seminal vesicular cyst, surgical resection was performed. Pathological examination revealed squamous cell carcinoma within a seminal vesicular cyst, along with squamous metaplastic foci and severe chronic inflammation. cell proliferation, determined with reference to MIB-1 labeling indices, showed a stepwise increase from normal columnar epithelium, through squamous metaplasia, to squamous cell carcinoma. Sporadic p53 protein accumulation without evident gene mutations was also apparent in both the carcinoma and squamous metaplastic lesions. We therefore concluded that the squamous cell carcinoma might have developed from squamous metaplastic foci associated with chronic inflammatory stimulation, within a seminal vesicular cyst.
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ranking = 1.8
keywords = carcinoma
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10/90. spermatic cord metastasis as an initial manifestation of sigmoid colon carcinoma: report of a case.

    We report herein the unusual case of a 63-year-old man in whom adenocarcinoma of the sigmoid colon manifested as metastasis to the left spermatic cord, the capsule of the left testis, and the wall of an associated testicular hydrocele.
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ranking = 1.0461715460596
keywords = carcinoma, adenocarcinoma
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