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Paraneoplastic hypertrophic osteoarthropathy: evaluation at 25 years after pneumectomy.

Abstract
Finger clubbing, which involves distal phalanx thickening and nail convexity, has been known since antiquity. Observations made in modern times by Bamberger (1889), Pierre Marie (1890), and other investigators led to identification of various causes of this digital anomaly which can be the first manifestation of a severe organic disease. Undoubtedly, this somatic abnormality, often associated with arthralgia and bone pain (full-blown hypertrophic osteoarthropathy -- HOA), is most often a harbinger of lung cancer. Paraneoplastic HOA is probably the best known and the most extensively studied paraneoplastic syndrome in human pathology. The familial or idiopathic HOA (pachydermoperiostosis) appears at puberty and is not associated with other underlying diseases. We present the case of a 58-year-old male with HOA, associated with spinocellular lung cancer, who survived 25 years after pneumonectomy.
AuthorsLaura Poantă, Ioan Parasca, Elisabeta Fazakas, Mihai Porojan, Raluca Pais, Lavinia Boian
JournalPolskie Archiwum Medycyny Wewnetrznej (Pol Arch Med Wewn) Vol. 119 Issue 9 Pg. 603-6 (Sep 2009) Poland
PMID19776708 (Publication Type: Case Reports, Evaluation Study, Journal Article)
Topics
  • Adult
  • Carcinoma, Squamous Cell (complications, diagnosis, surgery)
  • Humans
  • Lung Neoplasms (complications, diagnosis, surgery)
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Osteoarthropathy, Secondary Hypertrophic (etiology)
  • Paraneoplastic Syndromes (etiology)

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