Clinical Manifestations
Gastric carcinoma usually presents with nonspecific symptoms and signs. Epigastric pain is highly variable. In about one quarter of patients it may resemble the pain of peptic ulcer. More frequently it is a dull epigastric discomfort that may be exacerbated rather than relieved by food and may be associated with nausea and early satiety. Almost all patients have anorexia and weight loss.
Vomiting may be prominent, especially with distal tumors leading to pyloric obstruction. Tumors arising in the cardia may infiltrate into the gastroesophageal junction and cause dysphagia. The tumors commonly bleed, producing iron deficiency anemia and more rarely hematemesis with corresponding symptoms of weakness, fatigue, and shortness of breath. More rarely the patient may present when symptoms and signs relating to metastases, direct extension, or paraneoplastic syndromes are prominent. These include, for example, obstructive jaundice, malignant ascites, a gastrocolic fistula. Trousseau’s syndrome (thrombophlebitis), dermatomyositis, and acanthosis nigricans.
Physical examination may reveal an epigastric mass, evidence of one or more of the complications noted above, or other evidence of metastasis, such as a left supraclavicular Virchow’s node, a Blumer’s shelf (a mass in the perirectal pouch), or Rrukenberg tumors (metastases to the ovaries) on pelvic examination.
- DEFINITION
- Clinical Manifestations
- Chromic Renal Failure Due to Drugs
- SPECIFIC ENTITIES - DISEASES WITH KFiOWIi ETIOLOGIES -
- ENDOSCOPIC PROCEDURES
- MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY
- Pathology
- Nosocomial Pneumonia
- SMOKE INHALATION
- Direct (Toxic Nephropathy)
- CAUSES OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- Public health and environment
- APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WITH SUSPECTED OR CONFIRMED ARRHYTHMIAS
- Nephrotic Glomerulopathies
- RENAL PARENCHYMAL
- CLINICAL CLASSIFICATION OF JAUNDICE
- Management
- Specific Etiologies
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
- THE ZOLLINGER-ELLISON SYNDROME
- PERICARDIAL DISEASES - ACUTE PERICARDITIS
- MULTISYSTEM DISEASE WITH RENAL INVOLVEMENT
- INVASIVE DIAGNOSTIC TECHNIQUES
- VENTRICULAR RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
- Incidence
- ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
- CLINICAL APPROACH TO LIVER DISEASE
- VENTILATION
- GRANULOMATOUS LIVER DISEASE
- DC CARDIOVERSION AND DEFIBRILLATION
- Pulmonary Vasculitis
- ASTHMA
- PULMOIIARY FUNCTION EVALUATION
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- Chronic Interstitial Nephritis