scholarly journals Maxilla Osteonecrosis: A Differential Diagnosis in Patients with Metastatic Cancer on Bisphosphonates

2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Joshua D. Smith ◽  
Andrew C. Birkeland ◽  
Jonathan B. McHugh ◽  
Matthew E. Spector
2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F Fusco ◽  
G Scognamiglio ◽  
D Colonna ◽  
M Palma ◽  
G Granata ◽  
...  

Abstract Patient presentation During a routine check up, a 47yo man with Tetralogy of Fallot and congenital absence of left pulmonary branch was found to have a vegetation on his prosthetic pulmonary valve. His surgical history included TOF repair with left pulmonary branch bypass aged 4 years and a redo surgery for pulmonary valve replacement 3 years earlier. Before last surgery, CMR showed severe pulmonary regurgitation, dilated RV with mildly impaired systolic function (EF 40%) and absent flow in left pulmonary branch due to bypass occlusion. Diagnostic work-up The patient reported increasing shortness of breath (NYHA class III) over the last months. He reported one single fever peak two months before.He was on Apixaban and Amiodarone for previous history of AF. He was afebrile and an ejective systolic 4/6 murmur was heard. He was in sinus rhythm at 70 bpm. The TTE showed dilated RV with severely reduced systolic function (FAC 12%), severe pulmonary stenosis (peak gradient of 70 mmHg) with mild regurgitation, and a mobile and echogenic vegetation of 10 X 9 mm was seen on the prosthetic pulmonary valve. His blood tests at the admission demostrated raised WBC (9.460/uL) and PCR 11.7 mg/dl (n.v. < 3.0). The PCR remained stable during the following days. Serial blood samples for cultures were obtained, but all resulted negative. Uncommom causes of negative blood culteres infective endocarditis were investigated with specific serological tests for research of fastious agents, but all resulted negative. Antinuclear and antiphospholipid antibodies were also tested. A total-body CT was performed and it showed several liver formations. A FDG PET-CT was requested and it demostrated active marked glucose uptake by a mediastinic node, as well as by liver, brain and prosthetic pulmonary valve. Diagnosis and outcome After a careful review of all the clinical and imaging data, our opinion was that the most probable diagnosis was non infective thrombotic endocarditis in patient with metastatic cancer. In this situation, the valvular glucose uptake was likely due active thrombus formation rathen then being a sign of inflammatory response. Unfortunately, the patient died suddenly two weeks after the PET-CT and it was impossible to confirm the diagnosis with biopsy. Conclusion Differential diagnosis of cardiac vegetations is a challenging process including microbological tests, multi modality imaging and clinical reasoning. It is always necessary to consider alternative diagnosis, even when traditional imaging tests seem to suggest infective endocarditis. Non infective thrombotic endocarditis are a rare form of negative blood culteres endocarditis related to systemic hypercoagulable state (i.e. antiphospholipid syndrome, systemic lupus, behcet syndrome, cancer). Malignancies can be considered an unusual cause of cardiac vegetation and they must be taken into account on differential diagnosis. Abstract 1107 Figure. FDG uptake in pulmonary position


2019 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Hecimovic ◽  
Marko Jakopovic ◽  
Andrea Vukic Dugac ◽  
Feda Dzubur ◽  
Miroslav Samarzija

Interstitial lung diseases (ILD) are a heterogeneous group of diseases and one of the differential diagnosis which have to be excluded during diagnostic procedures are malignancies. We will present four patients who were referred to our Department because of suspicion of interstitial lung diseases according to radiology finding. In one case only, one of the radiologist’s differential diagnosis was pulmonary lymphangitic carcinomatosis. All four patients had exertional dyspnea and dry cough which are nonspecific and can be first manifestation of ILD or obstructive lung diseases. After diagnostic evaluation in three cases, diagnosis was pulmonary lymphangitic carcinomatosis due to metastatic lung adenocarcinoma and in one due to metastatic adenocarcinoma of unknown primary origin. Patients with lymphangitic carcinomatosis have poor prognosis without treatment and usually die because of respiratory failure. With these four cases we want to highlight importance of thinking about malignancies when we have patients with suspicion of interstitial lung disease especially when reticular pattern is present on chest X ray. We also wanted to show how important is radiology finding and multidisciplinary approach, and how radiologist’s differential diagnosis can be very helpful in making decisions in further investigations and way of clinicians thinking.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 3850-3854
Author(s):  
Daniel Tran ◽  
Qasim Rahman ◽  
Michael Weed ◽  
Bernard Chow

Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 506
Author(s):  
Yoshihiro Morita ◽  
Kana Kashima ◽  
Mao Suzuki ◽  
Hiroko Kinosada ◽  
Akari Teramoto ◽  
...  

Renal cell carcinoma, which has clear cells in 70% of cases, has a high frequency of hematogenous distant metastases to lung, bone, liver, and other areas. Metastatic cancer accounts for 1 to 3% of malignant tumors in the stomatognathic region, and the metastasis of renal cell carcinoma to the oral mucosal tissue, though extremely rare, does occur. In addition, clear cells have been observed in some salivary gland cancers in the oral cavity. Therefore, the differential diagnosis of metastatic renal cell carcinoma and salivary gland cancer is important. This review discusses the differential diagnosis between metastatic renal cell carcinoma and malignant tumors of the salivary gland.


Author(s):  
Bruce Mackay

The broadest application of transmission electron microscopy (EM) in diagnostic medicine is the identification of tumors that cannot be classified by routine light microscopy. EM is useful in the evaluation of approximately 10% of human neoplasms, but the extent of its contribution varies considerably. It may provide a specific diagnosis that can not be reached by other means, but in contrast, the information obtained from ultrastructural study of some 10% of tumors does not significantly add to that available from light microscopy. Most cases fall somewhere between these two extremes: EM may correct a light microscopic diagnosis, or serve to narrow a differential diagnosis by excluding some of the possibilities considered by light microscopy. It is particularly important to correlate the EM findings with data from light microscopy, clinical examination, and other diagnostic procedures.


2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 59-62
Author(s):  
Joseph Donaher ◽  
Christina Deery ◽  
Sarah Vogel

Healthcare professionals require a thorough understanding of stuttering since they frequently play an important role in the identification and differential diagnosis of stuttering for preschool children. This paper introduces The Preschool Stuttering Screen for Healthcare Professionals (PSSHP) which highlights risk factors identified in the literature as being associated with persistent stuttering. By integrating the results of the checklist with a child’s developmental profile, healthcare professionals can make better-informed, evidence-based decisions for their patients.


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