Cases reported "Hypopharyngeal Neoplasms"

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1/4. Does laryngectomy improve swallowing after chemoradiotherapy? A case study.

    organ preservation protocols of high-dose chemoradiotherapy have become fairly common to treat head and neck cancers. However, significant swallowing problems can occur. This study examines swallowing, oral tongue pressures, and tongue base-to-pharyngeal wall pressures in a patient who underwent total laryngectomy for improvement of swallowing after chemoradiotherapy for treatment of a hypopharyngeal tumor. The patient underwent concurrent videofluorographic and manometric examination of swallowing and examination of oral tongue pressures after the laryngectomy. One healthy subject was used as a control. After the laryngectomy, the patient no longer aspirated; however, he could swallow only liquids and pureed foods. He demonstrated difficulty with bolus clearance through the oral cavity and pharyngocervical esophagus. Pharyngeal pressures were reduced compared with those of the control subject. While total laryngectomy will stop unremitting aspiration, swallowing after chemoradiation may be severely compromised. This may not be overcome by total laryngectomy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = oral cavity, cavity
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2/4. Histological detection of intramyocardial abscesses in candida sepsis mimicking left ventricular non-compaction/hypertrabeculation on echocardiography.

    Left ventricular non-compaction/hypertrabeculation (LVHT) is a rare cardiac abnormality characterized by more than three trabeculations protruding from the left ventricular wall, apically to the papillary muscles, visible in one echocardiographic image plane and intertrabecular spaces, perfused from the ventricular cavity. LVHT is frequently associated with neuromuscular disorders. Differential diagnoses of LVHT are intraventricular thrombi, false tendons, aberrant bands, intramyocardial hematoma, cardiac metastases and the apical type of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Intramyocardial abscesses have not been reported as a differential diagnosis of left ventricular non-compaction. In the presented case, cardiac microabscesses as a result of candida sepsis mimicked left ventricular non-compaction in a 55-year-old man with hypopharyngeal carcinoma who died 20 days after chemotherapy. These microabscesses were not visible on echocardiography but were detected only at histologic examination of the myocardium. This case shows that intramyocardial abscesses as a result of candida sepsis are a rare differential diagnosis of LVHT.
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ranking = 0.026908844973578
keywords = cavity
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3/4. Spindle basaloid squamous carcinoma of the upper aerodigestive tract: immunohistochemical and clinicopathological study of three cases.

    We describe the clinicopathological and immunohistochemical features of three spindle (sarcomatoid) basaloid squamous carcinomas in three men aged 73, 69, and 59 years with a history of tobacco and alcohol abuse. Two tumors were located in the hypopharynx and one was located in the nasal cavity. The three tumors have a pedunculated polypoid appearance. Histologically, they were composed of conventional basaloid squamous carcinomas with extensive malignant spindle cell proliferation, comprising more than 50% of the tumor. The sarcomatoid component demonstrated immunoreactivity with one or more epithelial markers. One case in addition expressed CD99 and Bcl-2 and was originally diagnosed as monophasic synovial sarcoma; however, a subsequent biopsy disclosed basaloid squamous cell carcinoma with sarcomatoid stroma. Two patients were treated with surgery and radiation whereas one refused therapy. The patients were alive 14 (case patient 1), 10 (case patient 2), and 8 (case patient 3) months after diagnosis. In the absence of evidence from immunohistochemical or electron microscopy studies, a polypoid malignant spindle cell tumor of a mucosal surface of the upper aerodigestive tract should be considered a sarcomatoid carcinoma until proven otherwise. The type of epithelial component would determine the subtype of sarcomatoid carcinoma.
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ranking = 0.026908844973578
keywords = cavity
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4/4. liposarcoma of the base of tongue and tonsillar fossa: A possibly underdiagnosed neoplasm.

    Liposarcomas of the head and neck are exceedingly rare, and fewer than 90 cases have been reported in the literature. liposarcoma of the oral cavity is an even less common entity, and to our knowledge only nine cases have been reported to date. We report the clinical and pathologic findings of a case of well-differentiated liposarcoma of the base of tongue and tonsillar fossa. The patient is a 76-year-old white man with a long-standing history of a mass in the oral cavity and hypopharynx. The mass had been resected several times over the span of 23 years, and diagnoses of lipoma, neurofibroma, mesenchymoma, and angiofibrolipoma have been rendered on different occasions. At the last admission, a polypoid mass of the left tonsillar fossa and base of tongue was resected. The tumor was multinodular and measured 2.5 cm in greatest diameter. Histologically the tumor was ill-defined with infiltrating borders and was composed predominantly of mature adipose tissue with occasional lipoblasts. A small proportion of the tumor consisted of clusters of spindle cells and pleomorphic lipoblasts. Mitotic activity was not seen. The pleomorphic cells were positive for S100 protein and negative for muscle-specific markers. Ultrastructural analysis confirmed the nature of the lipoblasts. Our case depicts the typical natural history and histologic features of liposarcoma of the oral cavity. This tumor is usually well differentiated and has a high recurrence rate and almost no tendency for metastasis. Based on our case and review of the literature, it appears that well-differentiated liposarcoma of the oral cavity can occasionally be underdiagnosed because of the low mitotic activity and long latent period between the original diagnosis and first recurrence.
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ranking = 4
keywords = oral cavity, cavity
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