A 75-year-old woman with Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) pulmonary disease who had been treated by drug therapy for 7 years was admitted on an emergency basis for hemoptysis. Through the previous 7 years, her sputum cultures had been positive for MAC, and her clinical symptoms and examinations, such as chest X-ray and computed tomography, revealed that her condition had worsened. The lesions spread over the right middle lobe, segment 3 (S3) in the right upper lobe, and segment 6 (S6) in the right lower lobe, however, no lesions were present in the left lung.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a case of lung adenocarcinoma with stromal bone formation. A 73-year-old woman was incidentally found to have a coin lesion in the left lower lung field on a chest roentgenogram and computed tomography showed a nodular lesion containing a few coarse high density areas in the left lower lobe. Since transbronchial cytology revealed adenocarcinoma, left lower lobectomy was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFN1,N12-Diacetylspermine (DiAcSpm) is excreted in the urine of healthy persons as a minor component of urinary polyamine. It is a promising tumor marker, since its excretion is frequently elevated in patients with various types of cancers. DiAcSpm was first detected and characterized by HPLC fractionation followed by enzymatic detection, but more recently, antibodies highly specific for DiAcSpm was prepared, and an ELISA system applicable to determination of urinary DiAcSpm was established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe prognosis of patients with metastatic brain tumors has been very poor so far because most patients with metastatic brain tumors had other metastatic lesions and/or active primary lesions. Moreover, if no active lesions existed, local control of conventional radiation therapy was not so good, which also led to the poor prognosis. Thus, we conducted the current study concerning whether survival benefit existed in patients with controlled primary lesions and no other distant metastases, who were treated with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), a superior method for local control, for metastatic brain tumors.
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