Cases reported "Skin Neoplasms"

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1/295. Angiosarcoma. A rare secondary malignancy after breast cancer treatment.

    life-saving mastectomy and radiation therapy are established in the treatment of early stage breast cancer. Angiosarcoma, i.e. malignant angioendothelioma, is a rare tumor which can develop after several years of such treatment. The number of post-operative and post-irradiation angiosarcomas has increased in recent years. We report four cases of angiosarcoma which occurred after treatment of breast cancer and review the literature. In two of these cases the angiosarcoma developed on the irradiated breast skin after partial mastectomy and radiation therapy, in the other two cases the angiosarcoma appeared on a chronically edematous arm after radical mastectomy and radiation therapy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = breast
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2/295. Clinicopathological report: mucinous carcinoma of the eyelid.

    BACKGROUND: Mucinous carcinoma of the skin is a rare tumour that may involve the peri-ocular region. methods/RESULTS: A case report is presented of a 73-year-old woman with a right upper lid tumour, initially diagnosed as a basal cell carcinoma. Excisional biopsy of the residual tumour revealed mucinous carcinoma. Re-examination of the original pathology proved to be mucinous carcinoma, originating in the eyelid skin. Further treatment involved wide local resection and reconstruction. Systemic investigations were undertaken to exclude the possibility of metastatic mucinous carcinoma. CONCLUSION: This case is presented to alert ophthalmologists to the occurrence of this tumour in the periocular region, to highlight the importance of surgical excision with wide margins and the need for systemic investigation to exclude a primary malignancy in other sites, in particular the gastrointestinal system and breast.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = breast
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3/295. Inflammatory metastatic melanoma.

    An 87-year-old woman developed erythema, induration and tenderness of the skin overlying each breast. One year before, she had undergone an axillary lymph node dissection because of metastases from melanoma. The primary site was unknown. A skin biopsy showed pigmented tumor nests within the dermal lymphatic vessels, and immunohistochemistry confirmed the melanocytic origin. The diagnosis of inflammatory metastatic melanoma was made.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = breast
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4/295. Vesicular carcinoma erysipelatodes.

    Carcinoma erysipelatodes, also known as inflammatory metastatic carcinoma, is a type of cutaneous metastatic disease. We describe a 64-year-old woman with metastatic breast carcinoma who presented with a blistering erythematous eruption resembling erysipelas with formation of vesicles and bullae. She was found to have carcinoma erysipelatodes with a formation of vesicles and bullae.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = breast
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5/295. Paget's disease arising near a male areola without an underlying carcinoma.

    We report a 56-year-old man with Paget's disease occurring near the left areola without any underlying breast carcinoma. Histologically, there was no evidence suggesting continuity with a lactiferous duct, accessory breast, or microscopic gynecomastia. We review previous case reports of Paget's disease occurring in unusual sites and discuss their nomenclature from the histogenetic point of view.
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ranking = 0.28571428571429
keywords = breast
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6/295. Identification of bilateral breast sentinel lymph nodes draining primary melanoma of the back by preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative mapping.

    A 30-year-old white woman with a primary malignant melanoma of her right back at the Sappey line, 4 cm from the midline at the L2 level, underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative mapping of the sentinel lymph node using lymphazurin injection at the primary site and a hand-held gamma probe. lymphoscintigraphy showed one sentinel lymph node in each breast and another one in the right axilla. These three sentinel lymph nodes were accurately identified using a hand-held gamma probe during operation. An additional sentinel and one nonsentinel lymph node from the right axilla were harvested. All four sentinel lymph nodes were blue and showed significantly elevated radioactivity compared with background. Histologic analysis showed that all these lymph nodes were negative for metastatic melanoma. She has been followed for a period of 26.7 months since her selective sentinel lymphadenectomy and has been free of disease to date. This case illustrates the importance of preoperative lymphoscintigraphy in identifying in-transit sentinel lymph nodes in both breasts in addition to the clinically predictable sentinel lymph node(s) in the right axilla.
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ranking = 0.85714285714286
keywords = breast
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7/295. Clinics in diagnostic imaging (35). Metastases to the breasts, skin and bone.

    A 46-year-old woman presented with multiple skin lumps and right hip pain. Multiple nodules were palpable in the skin over the chest and abdominal wall, and in both breasts. Bilateral mammograms showed multiple solid masses, while ultrasound demonstrated multiple subcutaneous nodules. An osteolytic lesion was seen on the right hip radiograph. Excisional biopsy of a subcutaneous nodule revealed metastatic adenocarcinoma. The diagnosis of metastases to the breast is discussed, together with imaging features of other multiple breast lesions, such as fibroadenomas and cysts.
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ranking = 1
keywords = breast
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8/295. adenocarcinoma with signet ring cells of the axilla: two case reports and review of the literature.

    adenocarcinoma with signet ring cells (ASRC) is a rare skin neoplasm whose histology shows a solid tumor intermingled with signet ring cells in variable numbers. There have been only ten reported cases. All were elderly males affected on the eyelids except for a single case in the axilla. Two new patients with ASRC of the axilla are described. In both of them, immunohistochemical studies revealed neoplastic cells that had differentiated toward apocrine glands. These are the second and third reported cases of ASRC in the axilla, one of them is the first ASRC case in a female. It seemed that the apocrine sweat gland or aberrant breast tissue in the axilla were possible origins of these tumors.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = breast
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9/295. Stewart-Treves syndrome in a patient with elephantiasis.

    Angiosarcoma that develops in areas of chronic lymphedema is also called Stewart-Treves syndrome. It usually appears in areas of lymphedema several years after mastectomy for breast carcinoma. Only 10% of these angiosarcomas occur in areas of chronic lymphedema as a result of another cause. We present a patient with epithelioid angiosarcoma as a rare complication of elephantiasis.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = breast
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10/295. Chronic lymphoedema and angiosarcoma.

    Angiosarcoma has frequently been described arising within chronic lymphoedema of the upper limb following mastectomy and radiotherapy for carcinoma of the breast. We report a case of angiosarcoma arising in a lymphoedematous leg that had been subjected to radiotherapy 20 years previously for Hodgkin's disease. The diagnosis was expedited once the patient noticed the development of bleeding nodules. prognosis of angiosarcoma is poor with treatment options being wide-excision surgery, palliative radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Unusual bruised areas or bleeding nodules developing within chronic lymphoedematous limbs should be biopsied to exclude the diagnosis.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = breast
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