. The breast: its anomalies, its diseases, and their treatment . vor to their presence through Cohnheims theory of dislocated and sequestered embryonalcells. In this view of the situation we find ourselves supported by Lahn, Stoerk andErdheim, and Grohe, but opposed by Graham, Konjetzny, Lecene, Prym and Wilms. Xlii. Sarco-carcinoma, Carcinoma Sarcomatodes or Carcino-sarccnia.^—TheHtera-ture contains references to at least 20 cases in which sarcoma and carcinoma occur in thesame breast or in which both are mixed together in the same tumor. Such are reportedby Barton, Benmosch(?), C


. The breast: its anomalies, its diseases, and their treatment . vor to their presence through Cohnheims theory of dislocated and sequestered embryonalcells. In this view of the situation we find ourselves supported by Lahn, Stoerk andErdheim, and Grohe, but opposed by Graham, Konjetzny, Lecene, Prym and Wilms. Xlii. Sarco-carcinoma, Carcinoma Sarcomatodes or Carcino-sarccnia.^—TheHtera-ture contains references to at least 20 cases in which sarcoma and carcinoma occur in thesame breast or in which both are mixed together in the same tumor. Such are reportedby Barton, Benmosch(?), Coenen, Dorsch, Hedren, Hencke, Herxheimer, Kaufmann,Kerbirion and Danel, Kettle, Krompecher, Kennedy and Case, Morales(?) Orth, Perrier,PfeiflFer, Schlagenhaufer, Schwarz, Secousse, Takano and Wehner, the referencesto each case being found under the authors names in the literature upon sarcoma. These tumors naturally arouse particular interest because of the taxonomic difficultiesthat they provoke. Shall they be regarded as sarcomas or carcinomas or as both?. Fig. 154.—Carcinoma and sarcoma in the same breast, a, the carcinoma; b, the sarcoma. (Kennedy and Case.) Takano (Archiv fiir klin. Chirurgie, 1913, CIII, 155) differentiates between carcinomasarcomatodes in which there is carcinomatous parenchyma and sarcomatous stroma, andcarcinosarcoma which is a combination of carcinoma and sarcoma in one tumor with suchintimate relationships that one might as correctly say sarco-carcinoma or thinks, however, that carcinosarcoma is a general, broad and indefinite concept, whilecarcinoma sarcomatodes is a special, restricted, definite concept. Carcino-sarcoma is avery rare tumor anywhere, but makes its most frequent appearance in the mammarygland where it is more frequent than carcinoma sarcomatodes. Borst uses the name carcino-sarcoma for tumors of several differing forms: (o) acarcinoma and sarcoma arise in different portions of the same organ and may grow insuch


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbreast, bookyear1917