Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:44


860 Intraocular Tumors Intravascular, Non-Immune Hemolytic Anemia

■If necessary, intraocular FNAB is definitive in primary and metastatic
tumors.
management
■∼80% of intraocular melanoma eyes can be salvaged, often with good
vision.
■Treatments include laser, radiation, (brachytherapy, protons, or
IMCT), removal of the tumor with retention of the eye, and enu-
cleation.
■Metastases from uveal melanoma have a predilection for the liver.
■Uveal melanoma patients screened with serum LDH, GGT, CT/PET
scan
■Metastases to the eye treated with chemotherapy or radiation; rarely
a solitary lesion is amenable to brachytherapy or laser.
■∼33% of metastases to the eye have simultaneous CNS metastases;
brain MRI with contrast
specific therapy
n/a
follow-up
■Depending on histology, and potential for effective therapy, meta-
static evaluation accordingly.
■Retinoblastoma (Rb) virtually never presents in adults; bilateral Rb
survivors pass the disease in an autosomal dominant manner.
■Molecular gene testing, especially in familial Rb disease, is quite
accurate.
■More bilateral Rb children die from a second malignancy than Rb in
the USA.
■Bilateral Rb survivors require constant vigilance for second tumors.
complications and prognosis
n/a

INTRAVASCULAR, NON-IMMUNE HEMOLYTIC ANEMIA –


MICROANGIOPATHIC HEMOLYTIC ANEMIAS


CHRISTINE CSERTI, MD; FRANK J. STROBL, MD; JONATHAN KURTIS, MD, PhD;
and LESLIE SILBERSTEIN, MD

history & physical
History
■premature destruction of circulating red blood cells via direct
mechanical, lytic, oxidizing, or thermal forces (see Differential Diag-
nosis)
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