Cases reported "Stomach Neoplasms"

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1/453. Photodynamic therapy for early gastric cancer using a pulsed gold vapor laser.

    Endoscopic photodynamic therapy (PDT) using a pulsed gold vapor laser (wavelength 628 nm, LaserSonics Inc.) was performed on eight cases of early gastric cancer. Three patients refused to have surgery, and the others were in a high-risk group due to old age or complications with other diseases. hematoporphyrin derivative (HpD I, 2.5-3 mg/kg, Photofrin Inc.) was injected intravenously, and 48-72 hours later, the entire cancer lesion and 5 mm width mucosa encircling it were irradiated with a gold vapor laser through a single quartz fiber. The irradiation was delivered at 300-330 mW for 5-20 minutes, which gave about 90 J/cm 2 dosage. In seven of eight cases, local cure was achieved. recurrence was noted only in one patient. In one of eight patients, operation was carried out 1 month after PDT. Pathological examination of the resected stomach revealed that the effect of PDT extended into the tunica muscularis propria. Side effects of HpD, such as skin rash, were noted in two patients, but no serious complications of PDT were encountered. This suggests that PDT with a pulsed gold vapor laser is clinically useful in the treatment of early gastric cancer.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liver
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2/453. Clinical symptoms, hormone profiles, treatment, and prognosis in patients with gastric carcinoids.

    BACKGROUND: Type 1 gastric carcinoids are associated with hypergastrinaemia and chronic atrophic gastritis, type 2 occur in patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 combined with zollinger-ellison syndrome, and type 3 lack any relation to hypergastrinaemia. Type 1 tumours are usually benign whereas type 3 are highly malignant. AIMS: To identify possible tumour markers in patients with gastric carcinoids. patients/METHOD: Nine patients with type 1, one with type 2, and five with type 3 were evaluated with regard to symptoms, hormone profile, and prognosis. RESULTS: plasma chromogranin a was increased in all patients but was higher (p < 0.01) in those with type 3 than those with type 1 carcinoids. All patients with type 3 carcinoids died from metastatic disease, but none of the type 1 patients died as a result of their tumours. One type 1 patient with a solitary liver metastasis received interferon alpha and octreotide treatment. Nine months later, the metastasis was no longer detectable. She is still alive eight years after diagnosis, without recurrent disease. This represents the only reported case of foregut carcinoid with an unresectable liver metastasis that seems to be have been cured by biotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: plasma chromogranin a appears to be a valuable tumour marker for all types of gastric carcinoid. Combination therapy with interferon alpha and octreotide may be beneficial in patients with metastasising type 1 gastric carcinoids.
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ranking = 2
keywords = liver
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3/453. The liver in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Osler-Weber-Rendu disease).

    The livers of four patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia--including the original case of Osler--were examined at autopsy. Characteristic random focal fibrovascular lesions were found in all. The importance of recognizing the apparently common and seemingly benign hepatic involvement in this disease is emphasized in view of its possible confusion with more serious types of liver disease that may complicate the condition.
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ranking = 6
keywords = liver
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4/453. An unusual cause of haemorrhagic ascites following blunt abdominal trauma.

    Slow intraperitoneal haemorrhage following blunt abdominal trauma may present as haemorrhagic ascites. Such haemorrhage is usually due to rupture of spleen, liver or damage to small bowel mesenteric vasculature. We encountered a patient with bleeding from ruptured exogastric leiomyoblastoma. Two cases of traumatic rupture of gastric leiomyosarcomas have been reported previously. The operative treatment is usually delayed and the diagnosis established only at laparotomy. We suggest a high level of suspicion and early laparotomy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liver
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5/453. Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma with extensive sarcomatous change: report of a case.

    A 77-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with severe upper abdominal pain. ultrasonography showed a well-defined hypoechoic mass with heterogeneity in the left lobe of the liver, and computed tomography demonstrated a low-density mass with enhanced peripheral areas. magnetic resonance imaging revealed a mass with iso- to low signal intensity on T1-weighted images (WI) and heterogeneous high and low signal intensity on T2 WI. The tumor was found to be hypovascular by angiography. During 5 months of observation, the tumor increased in size, which strongly suggested malignancy. A laparotomy was performed under the provisional diagnosis of a neoplasm other than hepatocellular carcinoma, revealing that the hepatic mass had invaded the gastric wall. Therefore, a left hepatic lobectomy with dissection of the lymph nodes and hemigastrectomy was carried out. Histologically, the tumor was found to be composed of a large amount of sarcomatous elements and a small amount of adenocarcinomatous elements, both of which were partly intermingled. Immunohistochemically, the sarcomatous element demonstrated the features of malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH). Thus, a diagnosis of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma with MFH-like sarcomatous change was confirmed.
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ranking = 4.9892356308168
keywords = hepatocellular, liver
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6/453. Gastric adenocarcinoma with tonsil and submaxillary gland metastases: case report.

    Local invasion, hematogenous and lymphatic metastases are the major modes of spreading gastric cancer. The most common sites of metastases in patients with gastric cancer are liver, peritoneum, omentum, lungs and mesentery. Of the two pathological types of gastric cancer, intestinal-type gastric cancer showed preferential metastasis to the liver, whereas the diffuse-type showed a preference for peritoneal involvement and lymph node metastasis. However, metastases of gastric cancer to the head and neck regions are not common. The hematogenous route appears to account for a great majority of metastases to the head and neck regions. Malignant neoplasm metastases to major salivary glands or tonsils are not common. Several patients with cancers from the infraclavicular area have been reported with parotid gland or tonsil metastases. However, metastasis of gastric adenocarcinoma to the tonsils or submandibular glands is rare. We present a patient with recurrent gastric adenocarcinoma with both tonsil and submandibular gland metastases which is even rarer.
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ranking = 2
keywords = liver
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7/453. dna mismatch repair deficiency in curatively resected sextuple primary cancers in different organs: a molecular case report.

    A male patient synchronously or metachronously underwent six curative resections after diagnoses of cancers in the rectum, urinary bladder, stomach, colon, liver and lung. Five cancers, excluding early colon cancer, were analyzed for instability in seven microsatellite markers and in transforming growth factor beta type II receptor, insulin-like growth factor ii receptor and BAX. All analyzed cancers had replication errors and instability in at least one target gene. These results suggest that abnormal dna mismatch repair system plays a major role in the occurrence of multiple primary cancers in this case.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liver
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8/453. Gonadal vein graft for hepatic artery reconstruction.

    BACKGROUND/AIMS: Resection of hepatic arteries is often obligatory on resecting pancreatic, gastric and hepatobiliary malignancies. hepatic artery reconstruction is required to preserve liver function and blood flow to the bile duct. We applied the gonadal vein to hepatic artery reconstruction. METHODOLOGY: hepatic artery reconstruction using a gonadal vein graft was performed in two patients: one with gallbladder cancer and the other with recurrent gastric cancer. RESULTS: The right ovarian vein, 2 mm in diameter and 4 cm in length, was grafted for reconstruction between the proper hepatic and the posterior hepatic artery in one patient who underwent modified central hepatic bisegmetectomy and common bile duct resection. The left spermatic vein, 3 mm in diameter and 6 cm in length, was grafted for reconstruction between the celiac artery and the right hepatic artery in the other, who underwent upper abdominal exenteration. The former graft was occluded due to tumor invasion at 4 months after surgery, the latter one was patent at 8 weeks after surgery. CONCLUSIONS: The gonadal vein had an ideal diameter and sufficient length to accomplish hepatic arterial reconstruction. The gonadal vein graft will be a new and preferable addition to the selection of an optimal graft for hepatic arterial reconstruction.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liver
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9/453. Gastric enterochromaffin-like-cell tumor with liver and splenic metastases.

    We report a patient with gastric enterochromaffin-like-cell tumor with liver and splenic metastases. He was 68 years old and presented with major complaints of epigastric pain and weight loss. Under the diagnosis of gastric carcinoma with liver metastasis, total gastrectomy with splenectomy and lateral segmentectomy of the liver was performed. Intraoperative findings resulted in a diagnosis of adenocarcinoma T3N2P0H1, in stage IVa. Histological examination of the resected specimens showed a well differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma (enterochromaffin-like-cell tumor) with liver and splenic metastasis which demonstrated high-grade lymphatic and vascular invasion. There was no lymph node metastasis. The tumor cells in the stomach, liver and spleen were immunoreactive for chromogranin a and Grimelius--positive. We review the literature, as well as presenting this case report.
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ranking = 9
keywords = liver
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10/453. Hepatocellular carcinoma complicated by gastrointestinal hemorrhage caused by direct tumor invasion of stomach.

    A 65-year-old man with multiple hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) underwent intra-hepato-arterial chemotherapy (IHAC) through an implantable port over a period of 10 months after transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) had been performed three times. TAE was performed twice more, and radiotherapy (total dose, 30 Gy; given over a 3-week period) was given for progressive disease in the lateral segment of the liver. Three months after the radiotherapy had finished, the patient suddenly developed melena. diagnostic imaging revealed gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage from HCC invading the stomach, and total gastrectomy and lateral segmentectomy of the liver were performed because the bleeding could not be controlled. The resected specimen disclosed a centrally necrotic tumor that had invaded the lesser gastric curvature and perforated into the lumen. pathology examination revealed that the HCC had expansively invaded the gastric mucosa, resulting in exposure in the lumen. The possible mechanisms of direct GI invasion by HCC are briefly discussed, with a review of the literature. GI bleeding secondary to involvement by HCC is rare. The enteric radiation injury seems to have been largely responsible for the GI bleeding in this patient.
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ranking = 5.9892356308168
keywords = hepatocellular, liver
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