1.A patient with sinonasal leiomyoma presenting with exophthalmos: Case report and review of the literature
Tomoko Hanada ; Hitoshi Yamahata ; Ryosuke Hanaya ; Yuichi Kurono ; Hiromi Nagano ; Shinichi Kitajima ; Tsubasa HirakI ; Kazunori Arita
Neurology Asia 2013;18(3):327-330
A 71-year-old woman presented with a 2-month history of progressive exophthalmos. Magnetic
resonance imaging revealed a tumor occupying the right frontal sinus that compressed the right orbit
and eye ball. The tumor was resected through a right frontal craniotomy. The pathologic diagnosis
was leiomyoma and similar to the histologic diagnosis of a uterine leiomyoma resected 4 years earlier.
We suggest that this rare sinonasal leiomyoma was a benign metastasizing leiomyoma from the uterus
to the nasal sinus.
2.High-Grade, Advanced Tongue Cancer Treated with Arterial Injection Chemoradiotherapy by Multidisciplinary Medical Teams
Akio YASUI ; Shoichiro KITAJIMA ; Hisanobu MARUO ; Harumi MIZUTANI ; Emi SAWAKI ; Mariko MIZOGUCHI ; Yuna KATO ; Shinichi ISHIKAWA ; Masayo SOBUE ; Akiko UNESOKO ; Keiko NAITO ; Masaki NAKATA ; Hayato SIGEMURA ; Mayu MATSUOKA ; Tomoko NODA ; Tetsuya ANDO ; Minoru TERASAWA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2016;65(1):83-92
In recent years, favorable therapeutic outcomes have been reported for arterial injection chemoradiotherapy for tongue cancer. The present case involves an 80-year-old woman in our palliative care department who had high-grade, advanced tongue cancer. Because there was a request for surgery to prevent airway occlusion due to growth of the tumor, she was referred to our department in April 2009. As a treatment policy for controlling tumor growth in high-grade, advanced tongue cancer, arterial injection chemoradiotherapy was carried out through the superficial temporal artery, with a tongue artery catheter in place on both sides. Therapeutic effect was obtained, and it was possible to avoid airway occlusion through tumor regression. Dysphagia and dysphemia were improved, which in turn improved quality of life. In this case, there was an opportunity to carry out multidisciplinary team medicine, including support from the oral care and palliative care teams as part of the process of cancer therapy. Here, we present our findings in this case.