1/146. prenatal diagnosis of congenital neuroblastoma. Analysis of 4 cases and review of the literature.OBJECTIVE: Advances in prenatal diagnostics during the last 10 years have enabled the examiner to detect even rare fetal disorders such as fetal tumours. Congenital neuroblastoma is the most frequent solid neoplasm in infancy, with a retroperitoneal cystic or solid mass being a sonographic sign of the conditions. methods: We present 4 cases of neuroblastoma showing suspicious prenatal ultrasound findings. The investigation comprises detection during pregnancy, typical sonographic signs, as well as the postnatal outcome. In addition, a review of the literature is undertaken with a focus on prenatal sonographic signs of congenital neuroblastomas. RESULTS: In all 4 cases, a cystic tumour was detected during the 3rd trimester of pregnancy by means of B-mode sonography. One boy died of disseminated metastases at the age of 26 months. The other 3 survived after surgery and have remained healthy. CONCLUSIONS: The detection of a cystic suprarenal mass is suspicious of a congenital neuroblastoma. The delivery should take place at a perinatal centre.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
2/146. Desmoid tumor of the larynx complicating pregnancy: a case report.Desmoid tumors are locally invasive fibrous neoplasms that arise from musculoaponeurotic structures. We report the first case of a desmoid tumor of the larynx complicating pregnancy. At 21 weeks' gestation fiberoptic and indirect otolaryngologic examination of the patient's larynx revealed a submucosal tumor involving the left true vocal cord, ventricle of the larynx, and false vocal cord. Histopathologic examination revealed areas of extensive fibrosis intermixed with degenerated vocal cord skeletal muscle. Despite a subtotal excisional biopsy, growth of the desmoid tumor continued during pregnancy. Endoscopic evaluation 9 weeks post partum revealed complete regression of the tumor.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
3/146. Rapid enlargement and recurrence of a preexisting intrasellar craniopharyngioma during the course of two pregnancies. Case report.Enlargement of preexisting pituitary adenomas during pregnancy is well documented, but this phenomenon is unusual for nonendocrine pituitary tumors such as craniopharyngiomas. Only six cases of craniopharyngioma have been reported as presenting during pregnancy. The authors describe a 19-year-old woman who presented with amenorrhea and galactorrhea caused by an intrasellar mass. Seven months later, when she was 20 weeks pregnant, the patient developed sudden visual dysfunction. Emergency transsphenoidal surgery was performed to restore visual function, and the tumor was found to be a craniopharyngioma. The patient had spontaneous labor and delivered a healthy infant at term. The tumor recurred 4 years later, during her second pregnancy, and was again entirely removed via a second transsphenoidal approach. She again had a normal term delivery. During the 5-year follow-up period she has demonstrated no endocrinological or visual dysfunction. Control magnetic resonance images have revealed no recurrence of the tumor. The transsphenoidal approach seems to be the safest procedure to use during pregnancy to achieve an immediate optic nerve decompression and to preserve pituitary function.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 4.8952515620665keywords = endocrine (Clic here for more details about this article) |
4/146. trisomy 12 in juvenile granulosa cell tumor of the ovary during pregnancy. A report of two cases.BACKGROUND: Granulosa cell tumors constitute only 5% of ovarian neoplasms, and their coexistence with pregnancy is extremely rare. Juvenile granulosa cell tumor has a good prognosis if it is confined to the ovary, but this type behaves more aggressively than the adult type at advanced stages. CASES: We report on successful completion of two singleton pregnancies and deliveries of normal infants in two young women with juvenile granulosa cell tumor diagnosed and treated during pregnancy. This tumor has rarely been described in association with pregnancy. The presence of trisomy 12 as a single chromosomal abnormality was detected in these two tumors. Both tumors were localized strictly to the ovary, so conservative surgery was applied and proved sufficient to remove all tumor tissue. Follow-up showed no signs of recurrence 18 and 53 months after the interventions. CONCLUSION: These cases support the contention that trisomy 12 is a nonrandom chromosome abnormality in juvenile granulosa cell tumors and that pregnancy may affect nuclear stability in this tumor.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
5/146. pregnancy luteoma with granulosa cell proliferation: an unusual hyperplastic lesion arising in pregnancy and mimicking an ovarian neoplasia.A pregnancy luteoma (PL) was incidentally found at a term cesarean section in a 27-year-old black woman without any endocrine abnormality. The lesion involved only the left ovary; it had a nodular and focal pseudoalveolar growth pattern and was associated with areas of tubular sertoliform component, consistent with granulosa cell proliferation. immunohistochemistry revealed a diffuse positivity to Inhibin A, CD99, cytokeratin and vimentin. The ultrastructure was typical of steroid-producing cells. PL is a tumor-like lesion arising in pregnant women and often misdiagnosed as a neoplastic lesion; awareness of this rare entity and its differential diagnoses may avoid unnecessary surgery in young patients.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 27.548695980081keywords = neoplasia, endocrine (Clic here for more details about this article) |
6/146. adult sacrococcygeal teratomas.We report a rare case of a benign adult sacrococcygeal teratoma discovered during pregnancy. The cystic mass was confirmed on CT scan and magnetic resonance imaging. In the fifth postpartum month, three cysts (1, 2.5, and 6 cm) were excised. Pathologically, the specimens contained differentiated tissue from all three germ layers, including endocrine tissue within the ectopic exocrine pancreas.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 4.8952515620665keywords = endocrine (Clic here for more details about this article) |
7/146. colon cancer in pregnancy: report of a case and review of the literature.Most colon cancer cases occur in patients over 50 years of age, although about 3% of colorectal cancer patients are younger than 40. During pregnancy the incidence of this neoplasm is estimated to be 0.002%. To date only 32 cases of colonic cancer arising above the peritoneal reflection during pregnancy have been described in the literature. We report another such case, stressing the need for constant alertness on the part of physicians in the presence of abdominal pain and/or distension, a palpable abdominal mass, rectal bleeding and/or weight loss during pregnancy. In fact, the reportedly poorer prognosis of this cancer in pregnant patients is mainly due to the fact that the initial symptoms of the malignancy are usually attributed by the patient, but also by physicians, to normal pregnancy.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
8/146. Giant-sized condyloma of the breast with focal acantholytic changes.BACKGROUND: A healthy 26-year-old pregnant woman presented with a 6.0-cm exophytic mass in her left inframammary fold. The lesion was surgically excised. methods: Histopathologic sections of the skin lesion were reviewed in hematoxylin and eosin-stained slides. Additional sections were studied by an in situ hybridization method for human papillomavirus dna (HPV) types 6 and 11. RESULTS: The histopathologic examination demonstrated a benign exophytic, verrucous and papillary epidermal proliferation with features of condyloma acuminatum. Reactivity to HPV dna types 6 and 11 was demonstrated by in situ hybridization method. The epidermis adjacent to, and focally within, the neoplasm showed multiple areas of suprabasilar and intraepidermal acantholysis without dyskeratosis. CONCLUSIONS: Condylomas related to HPV 6 and 11 may be found in extragenital locations including conjunctiva, oral and nasal mucosa. To our knowledge, however, the extragenital condylomas described in the literature have not included the giant-sized variant. We describe an example of a benign, giant-sized condyloma acuminatum of the breast with nearby acantholytic alterations similar to Hailey-Hailey disease.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
9/146. Adenocarcinoid tumor of the ovary diagnosed during pregnancy. A case report.BACKGROUND: Adenocarcinoid tumors are uncommon neoplasms with dual morphology, showing components of a neuroendocrine tumor with carcinoid features and an adenocarcinomatous component composed of glands lined with mucin-containing cells, some of which are goblet type. CASE: A 36-year-old woman had a left adnexal mass found during the second week of pregnancy. Sonography showed it to be increasing in size and eventually to become associated with pelvic pain. During the 20th week of gestation, an exploratory laparotomy was performed, and the left ovary and fallopian tube were excised. A diagnosis of adenocarcinoma was rendered by intraoperative frozen section. A staging procedure was then performed that included removal of the contralateral adenexa, pelvic lymph node sampling, peritoneal biopsies and partial omentectomy. The vermiform appendix and gastrointestinal tract appeared unremarkable. The patient was discharged. Permanent sections of the left ovary revealed an adenocarcinoid tumor. CONCLUSION: While reports detail ovarian metastases of adenocarcinoid neoplasms from primary appendiceal and other gastrointestinal sites, this case, in the setting of a normal appendix and negative workup for an extraovarian origin, is the fourth documented one of a primary ovarian adenocarcinoid tumor and first diagnosed during pregnancy.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 6.8952515620665keywords = endocrine, neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
10/146. Ovarian germ cell neoplasm in pregnancy.Ovarian germ cell neoplasm in pregnancy, with variable outcomes after debulking surgery is described.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 5keywords = neoplasm (Clic here for more details about this article) |
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