Search results for "mediastinum"

showing 10 items of 28 documents

Inflammatory Pseudotumor of Mediastinum Treated with Tomotherapy and Monitored with FDG-PET/CT: Case Report and Literature Review

2010

Mediastinal inflammatory pseudotumor is a rare disease with reactive pseudoneoplastic features and a proven capacity for local invasion. The radiographic appearance of inflammatory pseudotumor is quite non-specific and the definitive diagnosis is based on the histological evaluation of tissue specimens. Resection of the lesion is the treatment of choice. However, nonsurgical treatments such as radiotherapy and steroids have been employed in the setting of incomplete surgical resection, tumor recurrence, and patients being unfit for surgery. The case described here is being reported because of the rare mediastinal location and atypical treatment approach including salvage irradiation and mon…

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyPET/CTRadiographymedicine.medical_treatmenttomotherapyAdult; Granuloma Plasma Cell; Humans; Mediastinal Neoplasms; Positron-Emission Tomography; Tomography X-Ray Computed; Fluorodeoxyglucose F18; RadiopharmaceuticalsMediastinal NeoplasmsGranuloma Plasma CellTomotherapy030218 nuclear medicine & medical imagingInflammatory pseudotumorLesion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineFluorodeoxyglucose F18HumansMedicineTomographyPET-CTGranulomabusiness.industryMediastinumGeneral MedicinemediastinumX-Ray ComputedRadiation therapymedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyPositron-Emission TomographyPlasma CellInflammatory pseudotumorRadiologyRadiopharmaceuticalsmedicine.symptomTomography X-Ray Computedbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryRare diseaseTumori Journal
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Testicular fusocellular rhabdomyosarcoma as a metastasis of elbow sclerosing rhabdomyosarcoma: A clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and molecular…

2010

Abstract Sclerosing rhabdomyosarcoma (SRMS) is an infrequent variant of rhabdomyosarcoma characterized by extensive intercellular hyaline fibrosis. We report the case of a 37 year-old male with a 9 × 6 cm SRMS on the right elbow. Histologically, the tumor showed an abundant extracellular hyaline matrix with extratumoral vascular emboli and microscopic foci of fusocellular embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (FRMS) separated by a fibrotic band from the sclerosing areas. One year later the patient presented with a right intratesticular tumor of 1.2 × 0.8 cm, which was reported as pure FRMS. Immunohistochemically, SRMS was positive only for MyoD1 and Vimentin and negative for Myogenin and Desmin. Both …

AdultMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyTime FactorsVimentinCase ReportSoft Tissue NeoplasmsSclerosing rhabdomyosarcomaBiologyTranslocation GeneticPathology and Forensic MedicineMetastasisFatal OutcomeTesticular Neoplasmslcsh:PathologymedicineBiomarkers TumorElbowHumansRhabdomyosarcoma EmbryonalWhole Body ImagingRhabdomyosarcomaHyalineIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceSclerosisChromosomes Human Pair 13Forkhead Box Protein O1MediastinumForkhead Transcription FactorsGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasemusculoskeletal systemFibrosisImmunohistochemistrymedicine.anatomical_structureTreatment OutcomeChemotherapy Adjuvantbiology.proteinDesminEmbryonal rhabdomyosarcomaTomography X-Ray ComputedOrchiectomylcsh:RB1-214
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A Follicular Dendritic Cell Sarcoma of the Mediastinum With Immature T Cells and Association With Myasthenia Gravis

2010

Follicular dendritic cell (FDC) sarcoma is a very rare neoplasm showing morphologic and phenotypic features of FDCs. It occurs primarily in lymph nodes but also in extranodal sites. So far, there have been no reports on FDC sarcoma associated with myasthenia gravis. In the following we will present a case of an FDC tumor of the mediastinum associated with paraneoplastic myasthenia gravis in a 39-year-old man. The tumor contained a major proportion of immature T cells, which may be connected to this patient's very unusual clinical presentation with autoimmune phenomena. Extranodal FDC sarcomas still seem hardly noticed, and their clinical and pathologic characteristics remain to be better de…

AdultMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyT-LymphocytesDendritic Cell Sarcoma FollicularMediastinal NeoplasmsFollicular cellPathology and Forensic MedicineAzathioprineMyasthenia GravisBiomarkers TumormedicineHumansAntigen-presenting cellFollicular dendritic cellsbusiness.industryMediastinumDendritic cellThymectomymedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistryMyasthenia gravismedicine.anatomical_structureFollicular dendritic cell sarcomaSurgeryLymph NodesSarcomaAnatomybusinessImmunosuppressive AgentsAmerican Journal of Surgical Pathology
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Salivary gland choristoma in the buccinator muscle: A case report and literature review

2015

Salivary gland choristoma (SGCh) is defined as the presence of normal salivary tissue in an abnormal location. It is a rare entity in oral and maxillofacial region and its ethiology is unknown. The typical presentation of salivary gland heterotopia is an asymptomatic mass that may or may not produce saliva. Some examples of ectopic salivary tissue in the pituitary gland, in the lymph nodes, in the middle ear, in the neck, in the jaw, in the thyroid gland, in the mediastinum and in the rectum have been documented in literature. We report the case of a 61-year-old male presented with a bilateral tumorlike mass in the cheek. The mass was painless, of fibrous consistency and had size change wit…

AsímptotesSalivaPituitary glandPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyChoristomaCase ReportOdontologíaSalivary glandsAsymptotesHipòfisiPituitary glandstomatognathic systemmedicineGeneral DentistryGlàndules salivalsOral Medicine and PathologySalivary glandbusiness.industryThyroidMediastinumAnatomyCheek:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Buccinator muscleCiencias de la saludmedicine.anatomical_structureUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASbusinessJournal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry
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Early deaths in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL): results of the Italian Pediatric Cooperative Group for Therapy of Acute Leukemia (AIL-AIEOP).

1984

In this retrospective multicentric study, we report on early deaths (ie, those that occurred during the first month of treatment) in a total of 943 newly diagnosed ALL pediatric patients registered from 1976 to 1981 at 21 centers of the AIL-AIEOP. Objectives of this study were as follows: (1) to verify the incidence and the cause of early death in a wide population of children with ALL and (2) to elucidate factors associated with early death and therefore to identify “high-risk” groups of patients. Out of the 943 ALL patients, 39 (4.1%) early deaths were registered. Main causes were infection, 20 patients (51.3%); hemorrhage, 11 patients (28.3%); uric acid nephropathy, 2 patients (5.1%); ca…

Cancer ResearchPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentHeart DiseasesLymphoblastic LeukemiaPopulationEarly deathHemorrhageInfectionsMediastinal NeoplasmsNephropathyAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsmedicineHumanseducationChildRetrospective Studieseducation.field_of_studyAcute leukemiabusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)Age FactorsMediastinumInfantmedicine.diseasePrognosisLeukemia Lymphoidmedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthSyndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretionKidney DiseasesbusinessMedical and pediatric oncology
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Indications for Computer-Assisted Surgery in Otorhinolaryngology

1998

Indications for the use of computer-assisted surgery (CAS) in otorhinolaryngology can be grouped into several domains including the following: difficult cases involving the anterior, middle, and posterior skull base, especially the rhinobasis or laterobasis, and diseases of the petrous bone, the infratemporal fossa, the retromaxillar space, and the orbit; extended paranasal sinus surgery and revision cases with surgically altered anatomic landmarks; and use for educational purposes where CAS can provide better instruction in surgical anatomy by relating the surgical field to radiological sectional images. A new field for CAS is surgery of the inferior neck soft tissues or pathologic process…

Computer-assisted surgerymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentInfratemporal fossaMediastinumSinus surgerySurgeryComputer Science ApplicationsPosterior skull basemedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyRadiological weaponMedicineSurgerybusinessFamily PracticeOrbit (anatomy)Computer Aided Surgery
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Differential diagnosis problems in a patient with dysphonia and chronic lymphocytic leukemia

2014

SUMMARY Dysphonia is frequently an expression of laryngitis, especially when it comes in the evolution of an immunosuppressed patient, as happens in chronic lymphoproliferation. But other causes of dysphonia should also not be forgotten, including the possibility of new malignancies, especially due to the fact that these patients have genomic instability that predisposes to appearance of a second or even a third cancer. We present the case of a patient who developed dysphonia during chronic lymphocytic leukemia evolution. Its etiology was a mediastinal compression through lymph nodes, not linked to leukemia, but produced by metastases of a bronchopulmonary cancer, appeared recently. Dysphon…

Genomic instabilitymedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsbusiness.industryChronic lymphocytic leukemiaMediastinumCancerCase ReportGeneral MedicineLaryngitisDysphoniaMediastinal compressionmedicine.diseaseSurgeryLeukemiamedicine.anatomical_structureotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineVocal cord dysfunctionEtiologyChronic lymphocytic leukemiaLung cancerDifferential diagnosisbusiness
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Preoperative Considerations on the Thorax: Anatomy and Surgical Landmarks

2020

The thoracic wall is the higher part of the thorax consisting of a musculoskeletal structure including the mediastinum, the pleuropulmonary cavities, viscera, lymphatic, vascular, and nervous structures. Its dimensions are influenced by age, gender, and life style including physical training. It changes constantly in shape and size according to respiration: Generally, males show an abdominal pattern while females have usually a thoracic respiration pattern. The anatomy of the chest differs between men and women, with considerable variations among different ages and races. The skin is thicker in male than in female. In the male thorax, hair is frequently present and the mammary glands are un…

Male chest wall anatomyThoraxRib cagebusiness.industryMale mammary regionSynchondrosisMediastinumAnatomyThoraxmusculoskeletal systemXiphoid processChest wall anatomymedicine.anatomical_structureClavicleMedicineAbdomenbusinessMale pectoral regionThoracic wall
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Mediastinal syndrome from plasmablastic lymphoma in human immunodeficiency virus and human herpes virus 8 negative patient with polycythemia vera: a …

2017

Background: Plasmoblastic lymphoma is a rare and aggressive subtype of diffuse large B cell lymphoma, which occurs usually in the jaw of immunocompromised subjects. Case presentation: We describe the occurrence of plasmoblastic lymphoma in the mediastinum and chest wall skin of an human immunodeficiency virus-negative 63-year-old Caucasian man who had had polycytemia vera 7 years before. At admission, the patient showed a superior vena cava syndrome, with persistent dyspnoea, cough, and distension of the jugular veins. Imaging findings showed a 9.7 × 8 × 5.7 cm mediastinal mass. A chest wall neoformation biopsy and ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy of the mediastinal mass allo…

MalePathologySettore MED/21 - Chirurgia ToracicaCase ReportSettore MED/15 - Malattie Del Sangue0302 clinical medicinePolycythemia veraPolycythemia VeraCase report; Fine-needle aspiration biopsy; Hematology; Rare clinical case; Thoracic surgery; Medicine (all)UltrasonographyMedicine(all)Rare clinical caseSuperior vena cava syndromeHematologymedicine.diagnostic_testMedicine (all)MediastinumMediastinumGeneral MedicineHematologyHerpesviridae InfectionsSyndromeMiddle AgedThoracic surgerymedicine.anatomical_structureTreatment Outcome030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHerpesvirus 8 HumanPlasmablastic Lymphomamedicine.symptommedicine.medical_specialtyBiopsy Fine-NeedleMediastinal Neoplasms03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicineHIV SeronegativityBiopsymedicineHumansbusiness.industryThrombosisFine-needle aspiration biopsymedicine.diseaseLymphomaSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleDyspneaCoughJugular VeinsbusinessDiffuse large B-cell lymphomaPlasmablastic lymphoma030215 immunology
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Pneumomediastinum as a complication of critical pertussis

2014

Background and Aims: Pertussis is a common and potentially serious disease affecting mainly infants and young children. In its non-classic presentation, pertussis can be clinically indistinguishable from other respiratory illnesses. Pertussis today often remains underdiagnosed in adults. Our aims was to report a complicated cases of pertussis. Results: A case of serologically confirmed pertussis occurred in an 18-year-old man presenting with pneumomediastinum, subcutaneous emphysema in the neck and chest, and persistent attacks of coughing with apnea that required treatment in the intensive care unit. Conclusion: Pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema have never been described in adul…

MalePulmonary and Respiratory MedicineBordetella pertussiAdolescentCritical CareSettore MED/17 - Malattie InfettivepneumomediastinumWhooping CoughpertussisRespiration ArtificialBordetella pertussisDiagnosis DifferentialTreatment OutcomePertussicoughBordetella pertussis; cough; pertussis; pneumomediastinumHumansImmunology and AllergyMediastinal EmphysemaGenetics (clinical)
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