Head & neck
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Mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma is usually associated with a chronic inflammatory disease from which lymphoid tissue of MALT type arises as a prerequisite for lymphoma proliferation. No well-characterized chronic inflammatory process has been identified in the larynx. ⋯ We may assume that chronic laryngitis could be a precursor to MALT lymphoma. This case is the first one to our knowledge of a primary MALT lymphoma of the larynx treated with conservative management combining surgical excision, reflux therapy, and eradication of gastric H. pylori infection.
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Lhermitte's sign (LS) is a side effect of radiotherapy (RT) on the spinal cord and typically occurs shortly after the procedure has been conducted. When treating patients with cancer of the head and neck region with irradiation, it remains difficult to avoid exposing the cervical spinal cord to unintended radiation. In this study, we focused on nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) alone and looked for various parameters that might influence the occurrence of LS associated with this disease after RT. ⋯ The incidence of LS associated with NPC and after RT was higher in patients who underwent bilateral neck-lymphatic boosting by electron beams than for those who underwent unilateral boosting or who did not undergo boosting. A correlation between increased incidence of LS and RT dose on the cervical spinal cord was noted when the cord dose exceeded 48.9 Gy. Therefore, wherever possible, a CT simulator and a three-dimensional treatment-planning system should necessarily be used to verify the dose distribution of electron-beam RT to diminish the chance of radiation overdose on the cervical cord.