Advanced FIGO stage and the presence of FDG-avid para-aortic lymph nodes on pretreatment PET/CT are significant prognostic biomarkers for PD and decreased overall survival in patients with in-operable cervical carcinoma independent from MTV, TLG, tumor and lymph node SUVmax.
PET positivity correlated with extrathyroidal spread, and elevated Tg in recurrent/metastatic DTC. FDG PET/CT in combination with Tg levels was crucial in defining management strategies in patients with DTC with negative 131I WBS. A negative FDG PET/CT scan predicts a favorable prognosis and lack of recurrence on follow-up in patients with "suppressible Tg" levels in the on-therapy state despite significant elevation of Tg in the off-therapy state.
Patients with ASP are more sensitive to toxic effects of alcohol. Alternatively chronic alcoholism leads to frontal lobe dysfunction recognised as ASP in the clinical setting.
The aim of this study was to present our experiences with patients operated on for the recurrence of papillary thyroid cancer with the combined use of preoperative ultrasonographic mapping and radioguided occult lesion localization (ROLL). Twenty patients who had already undergone total thyroidectomy and central/lateral neck dissection for papillary thyroid carcinoma were reoperated on due to locoregional metastasis. The patients with proven recurrences and high Tg wash-out levels in cytopathologic aspirates were operated on. For each patient, numbers of marked and non-marked lesions, and the metastatic and total numbers of marked/non-marked and non-mentioned lesions in the maps were recorded. Thirty-four of 40 (85%) lesions removed with ROLL were found to be malignant. In addition to the marked lesions during mapping, 60 additional lesions had been defined as suspicious. Fifty-six of these lesions were found at exact anatomic sites and localizations described and removed. Of 56 lesions, 36 (64%) were found to be metastatic. During postoperative follow-up, chylous leak with spontaneous regression in 7 days and seroma occurred in one patient. Radioguided occult lesion localization and preoperative mapping contribute to the safety and comfort of patients in planned reoperations on lateral and central neck regions.
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