Cases reported "Radiation Injuries"

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1/207. Directional coronary atherectomy for the diagnosis and treatment of radiation-induced coronary artery stenosis.

    While radiation therapy has been known to cause myocardial and pericardial damage, its role in accentuating coronary artery disease in the absence of traditional cardiovascular risk factors has been controversial. As younger patients with treatable cancers are being treated with mediastinal radiation, coronary artery disease as a cause for severe chest pain should be entertained as a possible diagnosis. We describe a 25-year-old male who presented with an inferior wall myocardial infarction 6 years after receiving mediastinal radiation and chemotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. He was subsequently treated by directional atherectomy to a 95% lesion in the right coronary artery. Histological examination of the atherectomy specimen revealed evidence of radiation-induced endothelial damage that had resulted in plaque formation and subsequent ischemia. Possible mechanisms for radiation-induced coronary artery disease and treatment options are discussed.
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ranking = 1
keywords = chest
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2/207. radiation induced liver injury detected by particulate reticuloendothelial contrast agent.

    radiation induced liver injury detected by a particulate reticuloendothelial MR contrast agent is described in a patient with metastatic colon cancer. The irradiated hepatic parenchyma failed to darken after ferumoxide administration. This finding suggests that detection of metastatic disease after ferumoxide contrast agents may be impaired in patients who have previously received upper abdominal radiation treatment.
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ranking = 1060.8272960344
keywords = injury
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3/207. breast cancer invasion into the chest wall with resection and reconstruction.

    Despite the advent of limited resections and radiation therapy in the treatment of breast cancer, a substantial number of women experience recurrence or persistent disease that invades the skin, soft tissues, and musculoskeletal layers of the chest wall. This problem, which can compromise local control of the tumor, can also involve pleura, lung tissue, and mediastinal structures. This article will cover some of the pertinent clinical decisions related to these lesions, their prognosis, and management by chest wall resection and reconstruction.
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ranking = 6
keywords = chest
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4/207. Photic maculopathy after pterygium excision.

    PURPOSE: To report a patient who developed photic maculopathy after pterygium removal. methods: A 27-year-old woman underwent pterygium removal with a conjunctival autograft after administration of retrobulbar anesthesia. A coaxial operating microscope was used, with an estimated retinal exposure of approximately 40 minutes. RESULTS: On the first postoperative day, the patient noted a paracentral scotoma. A fluorescein angiogram on the fourth postoperative day documented a phototoxic lesion in the macula. CONCLUSIONS: Phototoxic injury to the macula may occur after pterygium removal. Ophthalmologists should take precautions to minimize prolonged intense coaxial illumination of the retina while performing any ocular microsurgery.
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ranking = 212.16545920689
keywords = injury
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5/207. Subcutaneous calcification as a late effect of orthovoltage chest wall irradiation.

    Adjuvant radiotherapy to the breast or chest wall is given to some patients with breast cancer, to reduce the risk of local recurrence. It is known to be associated with various late sequelae, including subcutaneous fibrosis, telangiectasia and pulmonary fibrosis. Delivering radiotherapy to the chest wall and nodal drainage areas presents the technical problem of matching the glancing and anterior supraclavicular fields. Overlap between these fields will result in underlying tissues receiving a larger dose than intended; similarly, a gap results in an inadequate dose. We present the case history of a patient with subcutaneous calcification occurring as a late sequela of radiotherapy to the chest wall and anterior supraclavicular field. This has not been previously reported and is thought to have arisen from a high dose region in an area of overlap between fields.
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ranking = 7
keywords = chest
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6/207. Pulsed dye laser treatment of telangiectasia after radiotherapy for breast carcinoma.

    Telangiectasia formed following exposure to X-ray irradiation have been reported to respond well to the pulsed dye laser system. We present the case of a 34-year-old woman with extensive post-radiotherapy skin telangiectasia of the chest wall and axilla who was treated with six sessions of pulsed dye laser treatment, with a considerable improvement in appearance. We recommend the pulsed dye laser as an option in the treatment of post-radiotherapy telangiectasia.
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ranking = 1
keywords = chest
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7/207. Superior vena cava obstruction caused by radiation induced venous fibrosis.

    superior vena cava syndrome is most often caused by lung carcinoma. Two cases are described in whom venous obstruction in the superior mediastinum was caused by local vascular fibrosis due to radiotherapy five and seven years earlier. The development of radiation injury to greater vessels is discussed, together with the possibilities for treatment of superior vena cava syndrome.
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ranking = 212.16545920689
keywords = injury
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8/207. 'Full dose' reirradiation of human cervical spinal cord.

    With the progress of modern multimodality cancer treatment, retreatment of late recurrences or second tumors became more commonly encountered in management of patients with cancer. spinal cord retreatment with radiation is a common problem in this regard. Because radiation myelopathy may result in functional deficits, many oncologists are concerned about radiation-induced myelopathy when retreating tumors located within or immediately adjacent to the previous radiation portal. The treatment decision is complicated because it requires a pertinent assessment of prognostic factors with and without reirradiation, radiobiologic estimation of recovery of occult spinal cord damage from the previous treatment, as well as interactions because of multimodality treatment. Recent studies regarding reirradiation of spinal cord in animals using limb paralysis as an endpoint have shown substantial and almost complete recovery of spinal cord injury after a sufficient time after the initial radiotherapy. We report a case of "full" dose reirradiation of the entire cervical spinal cord in a patient who has not developed clinically detectable radiation-induced myelopathy on long-term follow-up of 17 years after the first radiotherapy and 5 years after the second radiotherapy.
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ranking = 212.16545920689
keywords = injury
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9/207. radiation-induced blood-brain barrier damage in astrocytoma: relation to elevated gelatinase B and urokinase.

    Successful management of brain tumors prolongs life, raising the risk of delayed injury secondary to the treatment. radiation therapy, a mainstay of brain tumor treatment, can damage the cerebral blood vessels. Acutely a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) may be seen, but fibrosis complicates radiation injury in the chronic phase. matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and plasminogen activators are two matrix-degrading proteolytic enzymes, which are induced by radiation. They disrupt the basal lamina around cerebral capillaries and open the BBB. We report a patient with an astrocytoma managed by partial resection and external beam irradiation to maximal tolerable doses. The patient later developed malignant brain edema shortly after stereotactic radiosurgery. Tissue obtained during surgical debulking to control the edema showed very high levels of gelatinase B (92 kDa type IV collagenase) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). Tumor cells were absent from the biopsy and subsequent autopsy specimens, but necrosis with fibrosis of the blood vessels was seen. If abnormal matrix enzyme function participates in the expression of radiation injury, then inhibitors to such enzymes may provide one strategy for controlling cerebrovascular damage after therapeutic brain radiation.
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ranking = 636.49637762066
keywords = injury
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10/207. Delayed radiation-induced bulbar palsy mimicking ALS.

    We describe a patient presenting with progressive bulbar dysfunction and spasticity that clinically mimicked amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). electromyography, however, showed no evidence of denervation and revealed a rare combination of peripheral and central myokymia. We feel that this pattern of myokymia represented a marker of neural injury from remote radiation therapy. nervous system disorders resulting from therapeutic radiation are described, and potential pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying myokymia are discussed.
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ranking = 212.16545920689
keywords = injury
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