17 research outputs found
Tegaserod Treatment for Dysmotility-Like Functional Dyspepsia: Results of Two Randomized, Controlled Trials
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74639/1/j.1572-0241.2008.01953.x.pd
Cardiac metastases
We report a case of esophageal cancer with symptomatic metastases to the heart; the patient was treated with short-course radiotherapy with good symptomatic relief. We reviewed the current literature regarding the epidemiology, clinical presentation, diagnostic tools, treatment modalities, and the prognosis of cardiac metastases. In this report we summarize the most recent autopsy studies (published between 1975 and 2007), in which we found an autopsy incidence of cardiac metastases of 2.3% among the general population, while the incidence among autopsies of cancer patients was 7.1%. Therefore, we share the opinion with others that there has been an increase in the incidence of cardiac metastases among cancer patients diagnosed after 1970, in comparison with the reported incidences in older series before 1970 (7.1% vs 3.8%; Kruskal-Wallis rank test; P = 0.039). Special attention was given to the role of radiotherapy in the management of cardiac metastases
Malignant pericardial diseases: diagnosis and treatment.
Pericardial involvement in malignant disease is fairly common. Usually the various clinical presentations--effusion, tamponade, constriction--occur in patients with known malignancy. Primary malignancy of the pericardium is rare, whereas secondary tumor involvement of the pericardium is more frequently observed. The common secondary solid tumors involving the pericardium are from lung and breast carcinomas; of the nonhematologic malignancies, lymphomas and leukemias are most frequent. A high index of suspicion in patients with malignancy, along with a history, physical examination, x-ray films, ECG, and echocardiography, will often make the diagnosis in a hemodynamically compromised patient. Occasionally, cardiac catheterization and pericardial biopsy are necessary to differentiate malignant pericardial disease from radiation pericarditis and restrictive heart disease. Therapy is dependent on the underlying condition and includes pericardiectomy, chemotherapy to obliterate the pericardial space, and external beam radiotherapy. These therapies are all palliative, but provide months of hemodynamic relief. The underlying prognosis of malignant pericardial disease remains grave
Malignant pericardial diseases: diagnosis and treatment.
Malignant pericardial disease is a common neoplastic entity that is often difficult to diagnose and even more difficult to treat successfully. The pathophysiology of malignant percardial disease is reviewed in this article and the various treatment options discussed
Somatostatinoma of The Ampulla of Vater in Celiac Sprue.
The increased incidence of gastrointestinal lymphoma and adenocarcinoma in patients with celiac sprue is well recognized, with 10% to 15% developing a gastrointestinal malignancy. Somatostatinomas are rare neuroendocrine tumors that occur most commonly within the pancreatic head or duodenum. Although fewer than 100 cases have been reported, somatostatinomas are often associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia-1 syndrome and von Recklinghausen\u27s disease. The unusual case of a 43-year-old woman with celiac sprue in which a somatostatinoma involving the ampulla of Vater was identified and resected is presented. To our knowledge, somatostatinomas have not been previously reported in patients with celiac sprue