2 research outputs found

    A Rare Case of Progressive Dyspnea and Bilateral Lung Infiltration in a Young Male

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    Pulmonary lymphangitic carcinomatosis (PLC) is defined as infiltration of the lymphatic vessels and perilymphatic connective tissue with tumor cells, which is secondary to malignancy. Therefore, it rarely appears as an initial finding preceding a diagnosis of malignancy. A 30-year-old male patient was hospitalized in our clinic with a pre-diagnosis of interstitial lung disease owing to the complaints of dry cough, progressive dyspnea, and acute respiratory insufficiency. He was diagnosed with signet ring cell carcinoma, which is a histologic subtype of adenocarcinoma, via gastroscopy, and lung involvement was consistent with PLC. Regardless of the patient age, PLC should be considered in differential diagnoses of progressive dyspnea, acute respiratory failure, and widespread interstitial lung involvement

    Prognosis analysis according to the predominant histological pattern in cases with lung adenocarcinoma undergoing complete resection

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    Lung adenocarcinoma accounts for over 40% of lung cancer cases. There is still uncertainty in terms of prognosis, particularly because of limited pathological information among the predominant sub-patterns of adenocarcinomas. In this study, we evaluated the prognostic relationship with the predominant histological patterns in adenocarcinoma cases that underwent complete resection in one year. We retrospectively evaluated 100 patients with lung adenocarcinoma, whose pathological stage was determined after complete resection. Six patients were excluded from the study because of missing data in their files. The mortality rates and tumor stages of the patients were analyzed according to their histopathological subtypes with the predominant pattern. Seventy-four (79%) of the cases were male and 20 (21%) were female. The predominant pattern was solid in 41 (43.6%) patients, acinar in 31 (33%) patients, papillary in 10 (10.6%) patients, lepidic in 9 (9.6%) patients and micropapillary in 3 (3.2%) patients. Lymph node involvement was N0 in 30 (73.2%) patients, N1 in 9 (22%) patients and N2 in 2 (4.9%) patients in the solid group; N0 in 22 (71%) patients, N1 in 3 (9.7%) patients, and N2 in 6 (19.4%) patients in the acinar group. In the solid group, 23 (56.1%) patients survived, and 18 (14.6%) patients died, whereas 21 (67.7%) patients survived, and 10 (32.2%) patients died in the acinar group. The mean follow-up period of the patients was 32 months. In the mean follow-up of all patients, 58 (61.7%) survived and 36 (38.3%) died. No significant difference was observed between the subtypes in terms of mortality (p>0.05). N2 involvement was higher in acinar adenocarcinomas compared with the solid pattern, and the advanced stage due to the T factor was observed more in the solid pattern. Acinar-type adenocarcinoma shows similar prognostic characteristics to those with the solid pattern. [Med-Science 2022; 11(2.000): 581-5
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