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1.
The Medical Journal of Malaysia ; : 168-170, 2013.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-630325

ABSTRACT

Male breast cancer accounts for only 1% of cancers in men and 1% of breast cancers. Cutaneous metastases occur less than 10% of all patients with visceral malignancies and are considered a rare and late event in progression of metastatic disease. A 45-year-old man presented with a lump in the left breast which was confirmed to be infiltrating ductal carcinoma. He underwent a left mastectomy and axillary clearance followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy to the left chest wall. However, he was non-compliant to adjuvant tamoxifen due to hot flushes. One year later, he presented with biopsy proven cutaneous metastases. Initially he had complete excision of the lesions, however, two months later more skin lesions appeared predominantly over the chest wall and back. Hormonal therapy failed to control the metastases as such he was treated with systemic chemotherapy. He is currently on third line chemotherapy.

2.
International e-Journal of Science, Medicine and Education ; : 33-36, 2013.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-629351

ABSTRACT

Abstract: Solitary adrenal metastasis is a rare presentation in breast cancer and it presents the clinician with a difficult therapeutic dilemma as there are no existing guidelines for optimal management. On literature review, we only found one published case report of solitary adrenal metastasis from infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the breast. Here we present a case of a 75 year-old lady who presented with a right breast lump which was subsequently confirmed to be infiltrating ductal carcinoma. She underwent a right mastectomy and axillary clearance. Computerised tomography (CT) staging revealed a solitary adrenal metastasis. She was treated with aromatase inhibitors and her tumour markers which were initially raised has now normalised.

3.
RMJ-Rawal Medical Journal. 2013; 38 (1): 81-83
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-146863

ABSTRACT

We present a case of nasal tuberculosis, a rare presentation of extrapulmonary tuberculosis. This report emphasizes how nasal tuberculosis can mimic other granulomatous disease and place a major challenge in its diagnosis and treatment


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Nose Diseases/microbiology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Nose/microbiology
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