We report the CT appearance of pancreatic metastases and describe their features in relation to the originating primary tumor. We also discuss some limitations in their differential diagnosis and report some theories explaining the pathogenesis of their occurrence. A total of 20 cases (9 males and 11 females) of pancreatic metastases were diagnosed at staging or follow-up of oncologic patients. All patients were evaluated with CT before and after contrast medium administration and had subsequent pathologic confirmation. In 1 case metastases were located solely in the pancreas; in 6 there was only another metastatic location, and in the remaining 13 there was diffuse spread throughout the body. Two of our patients exhibited a multinodular metastatic involvement of the pancreas, 11 had a solitary nodule or mass, and the remaining 7 had a diffusely enlarged pancreas, without any signs of focal disease. All but one of the solitary lesions measured more than 4 cm. In 2 cases a metachronous malignancy was detected at follow-up. Primary malignancies were located: 6 in the lungs, 2 on the skin (melanomas), 3 in breasts, 2 in the ovaries, 3 in the colon, 1 in the stomach, 2 in the kidney, and 1 the thyroid. Our findings confirm the existence of three patterns of metastatization to the pancreas: large solitary masses, multinodular lesions, and diffuse enlargement of the pancreas without focal signs at CT. In contrast to other studies, the large solitary lesion was our most frequent encounter, therefore making differential diagnosis vs primary cancer difficult. Metastases tended to repeat the imaging pattern of the primary. Nevertheless, we wrongly diagnosed pancreatitis due to a small nondetected metastasis, pseudo-cystic mass as a mucinous cystadenocarcinoma, conglomerate of peripancreatic lymph nodes, and a solitary pancreatic mass diagnosed as primary pancreatic cancer. Thus, when faced with a solitary pancreatic lesion at follow-up, histologic diagnosis is strongly recommended. In 2 cases changes in aspect and size were related to therapy.
Twenty-two consecutive patients with brain metastases from breast carcinoma were treated with a combination of platinum (100 mg/m2 day 1) and etoposide (100 mg/m2 days 4, 6, 8) every three weeks. Five (23%) achieved a complete response (CR) while 7 (32%) obtained a partial response (PR) for an overall response rate of 55%. The 95% confidence interval for combined CR and PR was 34-76%. Five patients received brain irradiation after reaching the maximum degree of objective remission by chemotherapy. Median duration of combined CR plus PR was 40 weeks (12+; 152). Median duration of survival was 58 weeks (2; 208+). Fifty-five percent of the patients were alive at one year. Our study demonstrates that this combination treatment is highly effective in the management of brain metastases from breast carcinoma.
One hundred and fifteen patients, suffering from sensorineural hearing loss were tested with a 1.5 T superconducting magnet. The authors describe utility of both T1-weighted multiple slice and T2-weighted multiple echo images for the evaluation of cerebello-pontine angle, internal auditory canal and their neurovascular content. In seventy-three cases MR cisternography was normal. The remaining forty-two cases were subdivided into twenty extracanalicular masses, eleven small intra-extracanalicular and nine purely intracanalicular lesions. All the lesions were histologically proven acoustic neuromas, except one intracanalicular mass which was a meningioma. Examination was inconclusive only in two cases and decision was then made to follow the clinical course. Advantages of MR cisternography over CT and air CT cisternography, such as absence of ionizing radiation and contrast material, easy multiplanar evaluation of the region of interest and the possibility to delineate both the cisternal and canalar extremities of the tumor mass are pointed out.
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