1.Review of the results of cervical cancer mass screening during the last 10 years.
Jun YAMAGUCHI ; Yukie WAKAHARA ; Naomi KOIZUMI ; Satoshi TOKOYAMA ; Hiroe TAMURA ; Masaki SHIOZAKI ; Isao KAWAGUCHI ; Tsugio TERAI ; Shinjuro KUROSHIMA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1994;43(1):8-12
From April 1983 through March 1993, 10, 767 women underwent health examinations at the Health Care Center in Obihiro Kosei Hospital. Cervical smears were taken from theuterine cervix for cervical cancer screening. One hundred and six women had abnormal results, greater than class III. Those patients who were diagnosed as having carcinoma numbered 10 (0.09%). Of the cervical carcinomas found, 1 was frankly invasive (adenocarcinoma Ib); 3, microinvasive (2; squamous cell carcinoma and 1; co-existence of adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma); and 6, carcinomas in situ (squamous cell carcinoma).
2.Metastatic Skin Carcinoma.
Hidetsugu SATO ; Seigo HIGASHI ; Jun YAMAGUCHI ; Kazumi TSUJINO ; Shuichi INABA ; Takashi YOSHIKAWA ; Tsuguo TERAI ; Yoshiaki SEKISHITA ; Masaru FUJIMORI ; Tsuneo SHIONO ; Shinjuro KUROSHIMA ; Norihiko TSUMURA ; Isao KAWAGUCHI ; Takeshi NISHIOKA ; Hiroki SHIRATO ; Kazuaki TAKAHASHI ; Shigeo SAKASHITA ; Masanobu KUMAKIRI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1994;43(4):964-968
We reported nine cases of metastatic skin carcinoma experienced at the Department of Dermatology, Obihiro Kosei Hospital during the period from April 1991 to March 1993. Lung was the most common primary lesion (four out of nine cases), followed by uterus (two) and stomach, breast, and kidney (one each). The clinical features of the metastases were classified into nodular (five cases), inflammatory (one case) and sclerotic (three cases) types. Peculiar zoster-like inflammation was seen in metastatic gastric cancer. Pathologically, adenocarcinoma was more common than squamous cell carcinoma. The average interval between the diagnosis of the primary cancers and the development of the skin metastases was about 30±25 months. The average life span after the detection of the skin metastases was 6.8±5.6 months. Poor prognosis of skin metastasis was thus reconfirmed.