Disease | lung cancer |
Symptom | C0024228|lymphadenopathy |
Sentences | 7 |
PubMedID- 20651998 | A 72-year-old man, 169 cm tall and weighing 56 kg, complained of general weakness and the diagnostic workup suggested lung cancer with mediastinal lymphadenopathy and syndrome of inappropriate secretion of anti-diuretic hormone (siadh). |
PubMedID- 24340058 | Ebus-tbna has been found to be an accurate and safe diagnostic technique for mediastinal and/or hilar lymphadenopathy and for staging of lung cancer. |
PubMedID- 21485155 | Surgical resection can be the first option for lung cancer complicating sarcoidosis with mediastinal lymphadenopathy, because making a preoperative assessment of n status is difficult. |
PubMedID- 22218970 | A postoperative lung cancer patient presented with lymphadenopathy, pleural thickening, and 18f-fluorodeoxyglucose (fdg) uptake on a positron emission tomography-computed tomography (pet-ct) scan. |
PubMedID- 21760843 | Predictors of malignancy in eus-guided fna for mediastinal lymphadenopathy in patients without history of lung cancer. |
PubMedID- 24307841 | The indications of ebus-tbna were also reviewed and classified into four major categories: 1) lesion adjacent to the central airway (e.g., tbna was performed instead of pcnb or thoracoscopy); 2) simultaneous diagnosis and staging (e.g., in patients suspected of having advanced lung cancer with mediastinal lymphadenopathy, tbna was used for one-step mediastinal lymphadenopathy instead of sequential lung mass and mediastinal biopsies); 3) inability to perform pcnb (e.g., the lesions were located adjacent to a large vessel such as the aorta or the lesion was too small for pcnb); and 4) replacement of mediastinoscopy (e.g., the lesions were located only in the mediastinum) (fig. |
PubMedID- 26029554 | Background: mediastinal lymphadenopathy in combination with lung cancer is suggestive for lymph node metastases but can also have other origins. |
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