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Histopathological Characteristics (histopathological + characteristic)
Selected AbstractsHistopathology of Pleomorphic Adenoma in the Parotid Gland: A Prospective Unselected Series of 100 Cases,THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 12 2001Eberhard Stennert MD Abstract Objectives/Hypothesis Histopathological characteristics of pleomorphic adenomas, especially of capsular alterations such as thin capsule areas, capsule-free regions, capsule penetration, satellite nodules, and pseudopodia in the different subtypes, are described. Study Design Prospective unselected series of 100 consecutive cases from 1997 to 2000. Methods Light microscopic examination and semiquantitative analysis of the pleomorphic adenomas. Results Fifty-one (51%) pleomorphic adenomas were classified as myxoid (stroma-rich) type, 35 (35%) specimens as cellular type, and 14 (14%) as classic subtype. Ninety-seven percent of all tumors showed areas with thin (<20 ,m) capsule independent of the tumor subtype. Tumors of myxoid subtype showed the absolute greatest regions of a thin capsule. Especially, tumors of myxoid type (71%) often had a distinct focal absence of encapsulation with tumor merging into normal parotid gland tissue; 11% of the cellular subtype and 43% of the classic subtype presented capsule-free areas. Thirty-three percent of the myxoid pleomorphic adenomas, 23% of the cellular subtype, and 21% of the classic subtype had satellite nodules or pseudopodia. Conclusions Almost all pleomorphic adenomas have focally thin capsules. One-fourth of all pleomorphic adenomas contain abnormalities such as satellite nodules or pseudopodia. More than two-thirds of pleomorphic adenomas of the myxoid (stroma-rich) subtype and at least half of all tumors show a focal absence of the capsule. Therefore, enucleation or local dissection of the pleomorphic adenoma is not a sufficient surgical treatment of this special tumor entity. We recommend, depending on the location of the tumor, a lateral or total parotidectomy as the treatment of choice. [source] Presence of high-risk human papillomavirus DNA in penile carcinoma predicts favorable outcome in survivalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 5 2006Anne P. Lont Abstract There is evidence that a subset of penile carcinomas is caused by infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV). However, extensive studies on the possible influence of HPV infection on clinical outcome of penile cancer are lacking. This investigation is aimed to examine the prevalence of high-risk HPV in a large series of penile squamous-cell carcinomas (SCCs) and to determine the relationship between HPV and survival. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor specimens of 171 patients with penile carcinoma were tested for high-risk HPV DNA presence by GP5+/6+-PCR. The clinical course of the patients and the histopathological characteristics of the primary tumors were reviewed. High-risk HPV DNA was detected in 29% of the tumors, with HPV 16 being the predominant type, accounting for 76% of high-risk HPV containing SCCs. Disease-specific 5-year survival in the high-risk HPV-negative group and high-risk HPV-positive group was 78% and 93%, respectively (log rank test p = 0.03). In multivariate analysis, the HPV status was an independent predictor for disease-specific mortality (p = 0.01) with a hazard ratio of 0.14 (95% CI: 0.03,0.63). Our results indicate that the presence of high-risk HPV (29%) confers a survival advantage in patients with penile carcinoma. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Gnathodiaphyseal Dysplasia: A Syndrome of Fibro-Osseous Lesions of Jawbones, Bone Fragility, and Long Bone BowingJOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 9 2001Mara Riminucci Abstract We report an unusual generalized skeletal syndrome characterized by fibro-osseous lesions of the jawbones with a prominent psammomatoid body component, bone fragility, and bowing/sclerosis of tubular bones. The case fits with the emerging profile of a distinct syndrome with similarities to previously reported cases, some with an autosomal dominant inheritance and others sporadic. We suggest that the syndrome be named gnathodiaphyseal dysplasia. The patient had been diagnosed previously with polyostotic fibrous dysplasia (PFD) elsewhere, but further clinical evaluation, histopathological study, and mutation analysis excluded this diagnosis. In addition to providing a novel observation of an as yet poorly characterized syndrome, the case illustrates the need for stringent diagnostic criteria for FD. The jaw lesions showed fibro-osseous features with the histopathological characteristics of cemento-ossifying fibroma, psammomatoid variant. This case emphasizes that the boundaries between genuine GNAS1 mutation-positive FD and other fibro-osseous lesions occurring in the jawbones should be kept sharply defined, contrary to a prevailing tendency in the literature. A detailed pathological study revealed previously unreported features of cemento-ossifying fibroma, including the participation of myofibroblasts and the occurrence of psammomatoid bodies and aberrant mineralization, within the walls of blood vessels. Transplantation of stromal cells grown from the lesion into immunocompromised mice resulted in a close mimicry of the native lesion, including the sporadic formation of psammomatoid bodies, suggesting an intrinsic abnormality of bone-forming cells. [source] Effects of antisense oligodeoxynucleotide to type I collagen gene on hypertrophic scars in the transplanted nude mouse modelJOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, Issue 11 2009Julin Xie Background:, Antisense nucleic acids are effective in inhibiting harmful or uncontrolled gene expression. We had previously proved that the antisense DNA to type I collagen could effectively inhibit the synthesis of collagen type I in cultured hypertrophic scar fibroblasts, suggesting a potential role in anti-scarring, but there are no published reports of its effect on scar in the transplanted nude mouse model. Aims:, To investigate the effects of antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ASODN) to type I collagen gene on hypertrophic scars in the transplanted nude mouse model and clarify the potential of ASODN for the treatment of scars. Methods:, The nude mouse model of hypertrophic scar was created and subjected to daily injections with ASODN and LipofectamineÔ for 2 ,4 or 6 weeks. We then examined the scars for changes in histopathological characteristics. The effects of ASODN on type I collagen gene expression were examined by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and Western blots. Results:, The ASODN could remarkably alleviate the scar in the nude mouse model and consistently inhibit type I collagen gene expression at both the mRNA and protein levels. Conclusion:, ASODN was effective in downregulating type I collagen gene expression and could prove to be useful in the treatment of scars. [source] Actinic cheilitis: histopathology and p53JOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, Issue 8 2006Dalva Regina Neto Pimentel Background:, Chronic actinic cheilitis (AC) is a precursor of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the lip. Objectives:, To evaluate the histopathological characteristics that may help to identify AC more susceptible to carcinomatous transformation, to assess the p53 protein expression in AC, and to determine the value of the p53 expression as a marker of transformation into SCC of the lip. Methods:, Seventy cases of chronic AC were reviewed, 31 of which were associated with SCCs. The samples were obtained from pathology reports of AC and SCC of the lip. Histopathology and immunohistochemical expression of the p53 protein were evaluated in isolated AC and in AC adjacent to SCC. Results:, The intensity of the inflammatory infiltrate in the corium was the only histopathological finding significantly associated both with the presence of an invasive tumor and with the degree of epithelial atypia. Most AC (85%) were immunoreactive to the p53 protein. The p53 protein expression in cheilitis was not statistically associated with any other histopathological criteria. Conclusions:, An intense inflammatory infiltrate in AC was predictive of an adjacent invasive SCC. In this study, the p53 protein immunoreactivity was not a marker of malignant transformation. [source] Do axonal defects in tau and amyloid precursor protein transgenic animals model axonopathy in Alzheimer's disease?JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 4 2006Jürgen Götz Abstract The subcellular localization of organelles, mRNAs and proteins is particularly challenging in neurons. Owing to their extended morphology, with axons in humans exceeding a meter in length, in addition to which they are not renewed but persist for the entire lifespan, it is no surprise that neurons are highly vulnerable to any perturbation of their sophisticated transport machinery. There is emerging evidence that impaired transport is not only causative for a range of motor disorders, but possibly also for Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related neurodegenerative disorders. Support for this hypothesis comes from transgenic animal models. Overexpression of human tau and amyloid precursor protein (APP) in mice and flies models the key hallmark histopathological characteristics of AD, such as somatodendritic accumulation of phosphorylated forms of tau and ,-amyloid (A,) peptide-containing amyloid plaques, as well as axonopathy. The latter has also been demonstrated in mutant mice with altered levels of Alzheimer-associated genes, such as presenilin (PS). In A,-producing APP transgenic mice, axonopathy was observed before the onset of plaque formation and tau hyperphosphorylation. In human AD brain, an axonopathy was revealed for early but not late Braak stages. The overall picture is that key players in AD, such as tau, APP and PS, perturb axonal transport early on in AD, causing impaired synaptic plasticity and reducing survival rates. It will be challenging to determine the molecular mechanisms of these different axonopathies, as this might assist in the development of new therapeutic strategies. [source] Parotid sialosis: morphometrical analysis of the glandular parenchyme and stroma among diabetic and alcoholic patientsJOURNAL OF ORAL PATHOLOGY & MEDICINE, Issue 1 2010Carolina Merlo J Oral Pathol Med (2010) 39: 10,15 Background:, Among the agents that cause parotid sialosis, diabetes mellitus type 2 and chronic alcoholism are included. In this study, the morphometrical modifications in the diabetic parotid sialosis were determined to compare them with the histopathological characteristics of alcoholic parotid sialosis. Methods:, Five parotid biopsy samples obtained from patients with diabetic sialosis, 12 samples from patients with alcoholic sialosis and seven from individuals without these pathologies (control group) were analyzed. A morphometrical study of parotid parenchyme and stroma, using a digital image analyzer attached to an optical microscope, was carried out. Dimensions of serous acini and striated ducts, the area occupied by the fatty tissue, and the number of ducts were recorded. Mean values were compared using the Mann,Whitney U -test (P , 0.05). Results:, The variables analyzed in diabetic patients did not show significant differences with respect to the control group. However, when diabetics were compared with alcoholics, the alcoholics exhibited a noticeable reduction in the proportion of fatty tissue of stroma and a significant development of ductal epithelium that contributed to increase the caliber of the striated ducts. Conclusions:, These results indicate that the glandular hypertrophy in the diabetic parotid sialosis is not directly associated with the ductal and acinar size, amount of fatty tissue and ductal hyperplasy. Nevertheless, these findings show that the ductal dimensions and the proportion of adipose tissue are variables that allow us to establish histopathological differences between diabetic and alcoholic sialosis. [source] Oral premalignant lesions: is a biopsy reliable?JOURNAL OF ORAL PATHOLOGY & MEDICINE, Issue 5 2007P. Holmstrup Abstract Purpose:, The purpose of the present retrospective study was to learn whether a biopsy of oral premalignant lesions, leukoplakia and erythroplakia, shows histopathological findings representative of the whole surgically removed lesion. Moreover, to see whether histopathological characteristics of the whole lesion are significant for future malignant development after surgery. Materials and methods:, A total of 101 lesions in 96 patients were included, 42 lesions (41%) being homogenous and 50 (50%) non-homogenous leukoplakias, whereas nine (9%) were erythroplakias. The lesions were biopsied and subsequently surgically removed on the average of 10.4 months after biopsy. Surgical specimens were examined in two or more step sections distributed throughout the specimen. The histological findings of the biopsies were compared with those of the whole lesions. After surgical intervention the patients were followed (mean 6.8 years, range: 1.5,18.6), and new biopsies taken in case of recurrences. Smokers (73%) were encouraged to quit smoking and candidal infections were treated. The possible influence of different variables on the risk of malignant development was estimated by means of logistic regression analysis. Results:, Histological examination of the whole lesions showed that seven lesions (7%) harboured a carcinoma and 70 lesions (69%) showed a degree of epithelial dysplasia or carcinoma in situ. Eleven lesions (12%) developed carcinoma after a mean follow-up period of 7.5 years. A comparison of the degree of dysplasia in the biopsies with that of the whole lesion demonstrated variation with concurrent diagnosis in 49% of the lesions and in 79% after inclusion of lesions with one degree up or down the scale of epithelial dysplasia. Conclusion:, The estimated odds ratio showed that none of the associated variables including presence of any degree of epithelial dysplasia in the whole lesion, site, demarcation and smoking had influence on the risk of malignant development. [source] Clinicopathologic profile of normocomplementemic and hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis: a study from South IndiaJOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY & VENEREOLOGY, Issue 7 2008CVP Dincy Abstract Background, This study aims to study the clinical and histopathological characteristics of hypocomplementemic and normocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis (HUVS and NUV) among dermatology clinic attendees in a tertiary care hospital in South India. Patients and methods, A prospective study was conducted in the dermatology department from February 2003 to May 2004. Seventy-five patients met the inclusion criteria for UV. Sixty-eight patients in whom complement levels were available were classified into either NUV or HUVS groups. Clinical features, laboratory parameters and histological features were compared, and the significance of differences was established using Pearson's Chi-squared test. Results, There was a female preponderance among patients with HUVS. Wheals > 24 h were seen in 90% of patients, and in 54.4% of patients, the wheals were partially blanching or non-blanching. Angioedema was more prevalent in patients with NUV than HUVS (44.4% vs. 21.4%). Systemic involvement was seen in 64.3% of patients with HUVS and 44.4% of patients with NUV. Fever, ANA positivity and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) were significantly associated with HUVS. In most cases of UV, a provoking factor could not be identified. Neutrophilic small vessel vasculitis was seen in 42.9% of patients with HUVS and 16.6% patients with NUV. Direct immunofluorescence test showing immunoreactants at the dermo-epidermal junction were present in 60% of patients with HUVS and 33.3% patients with NUV. Conclusion, The clinical features of Indian patients with UV were similar to those reported from the West. Fever, ANA positivity and SLE were significantly associated with HUVS. [source] Altered expression of mRNA for HIF-1, and its target genes RTP801and VEGF in patients with oral lichen planusORAL DISEASES, Issue 3 2010M Ding Oral Diseases (2010) 16, 299,304 Objective:, To explore a potential causal contribution of the transcription factor HIF-1, and its target gene, RTP801 and VEGF, to the development of oral lichen planus (OLP). Design relevant:, Twenty-two adult OLP patients were enrolled in this study. All OLP diagnoses were verified by histopathological characteristics. Normal mucous specimens were collected from 12 controls after various oral surgeries. Material and method:, RNA was isolated from OLP and control specimens. Microarray was performed using BiostarH-40s gene chip. Expression of HIF-1,, VEGF and RTP801 was evaluated using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Unpaired t -test and one-way ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. Results:, Microarray results showed that RTP801 expression was lower in OLP than in controls (779 vs 3090). qPCR further confirmed that expression of RTP801 was similarly lower in OLP than in controls (0.363 vs 1.473, P < 0.001); expression of VEGF was also lower in OLP (0.448 vs 1.74, P = 0.012). In contrast, expression of HIF-1, was higher in OLP than in controls (11.12 vs 1.628, P < 0.001). Conclusion:, The oral mucosa of OLP is hypoxic. Genes that are activated by hypoxia, such as RTP801 and VEGF, and their signal cascades may be novel potential therapeutic targets for OLP. [source] A histopathological and lectin-histochemical study of the lining epithelium in postoperative maxillary cystsORAL DISEASES, Issue 5 2002M Maruyama OBJECTIVE:,Histopathological and lectin-histochemical characteristics were studied in the lining epithelium of postoperative maxillary cysts (POMC). MATERIALS AND METHODS:,Histological (HE, PAS, AB), immunohistochemical (CD3 and L26) and lectin (wheat germ agglutinin, WGA; Ulex europaeus agglutinin I, UEA-I; concanavalin A, ConA) stainings were performed in the 360 POMC specimens. The number of goblet cells and inflammatory cells was counted and statistically analyzed. RESULTS:,The lining epithelium was classified into three types based on histopathological characteristics; pseudostratified ciliated epithelium (pSCE), transitional epithelium (TE) and stratified squamous epithelium (SSE). Local infiltration of inflammatory cells into the cyst wall was associated with an increased number of goblet cells in the lining epithelium. The observed association between the infiltration of inflammatory cells and an increase in the number of goblet cells was statistically significant in groups with lining pSCE and TE. Glycoconjugate histochemical analysis revealed that the surfaces of the lining epithelium with squamous metaplasia showed an increased degree of staining reactivity with UEA-I, whereas the staining reactivity with ConA was reduced. Goblet cells were able to be stained with WGA and UEA-I, but showed extremely low reactivity with ConA. CONCLUSION:,Changes in the glycoconjugate expression of the metaplastic lining epithelium and goblet cell development play an important role in the local defense mechanisms against inflammatory factors in POMC. [source] Unique histological characteristics of Scedosporium that could aid in its identificationPATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2010Masatomo Kimura Scedosporium prolificans has been increasingly recognized as an etiological agent of disseminated mycelial infections in profoundly immunocompromised patients. Reported herein is a case of disseminated S. prolificans infection in a patient undergoing anti-neoplastic chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia. Antemortem blood culture yielded S. prolificans, which was confirmed on conventional morphological examination and polymerase chain reaction-based DNA sequencing targeting internally transcribed spacer regions. Histopathology of autopsy specimens indicated fungal infection in the heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, spleen, pancreas and gastrointestinal tract, with the development of hemorrhagic and ischemic necrosis. The infecting fungus had developing septate hyphae and was identified as belonging to the genus Scedosporium, on in situ hybridization of tissue. The combination of haphazardly branching hyphae and lemon-shaped conidia appeared to be the most useful distinguishing features to allow differentiation of this fungus from other filamentous fungi in tissue. Three other unique histopathological characteristics of the fungus were noted: (i) parallel hyphae bridged at right angles to produce letter-H patterns; (ii) intravascular conidiation; and (iii) purple conidia in tissue, though these are usually described as brown in most text books. Precise histopathology, in addition to other techniques such as in situ hybridization, can aid in the identification of etiological fungi. [source] Survival in surgically treated, nodal positive prostate cancer patients is predicted by histopathological characteristics of the primary tumor and its lymph node metastases ,THE PROSTATE, Issue 4 2009Achim Fleischmann Abstract BACKGROUND Histopathological risk factors for survival stratification of surgically treated nodal positive prostate cancer patients are poorly defined as reflected by only one category for nodal metastases. METHODS We evaluated biochemical recurrence-free survival (RFS), disease-specific survival (DSS), and overall survival (OS) in 102 nodal positive, hormone treatment-naïve prostate cancer patients (median age: 65 years, range: 45,75 years; median follow-up 7.7 years, range: 1.0,15.9 years) who underwent radical prostatectomy and standardized extended lymphadenectomy. RESULTS A significant stratification was possible, with the Gleason score of the primary and virtually all nodal parameters favoring patients with better differentiated primaries and metastases, lower nodal tumor burden, and without extranodal extension of metastases. In multivariate analyses, diameter of the largest metastasis (,10 mm vs. >10 mm) was the strongest independent predictor for RFS (P,<,0.001), DSS (P,<,0.001), and OS (P,<,0.001) with a more than quadrupled relative risk of cancer related deaths for patients with larger metastases (Hazard ratio: 4.2, Confidence interval: 2.0,8.9; 5-year RFS/DSS/OS: 18%/57%/54%). The highest 5-year survival rates were seen in patients with micrometastases only (RFS/DSS/OS: 47%/94%/94%). CONCLUSION The TNM classification's current allocation of only one category for nodal metastases in prostate cancers is unsatisfactory since subgroups with significantly different prognoses can be identified. The diameter of the patient's largest metastasis (,10 mm vs. >10 mm) should be used for substaging because of its independent prognostic value. The substage "micrometastasis only" is also useful in nodal positive prostate cancer since it designates the subgroup with the most favorable outcome. Prostate 69:352,362, 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Changes in the stage and surgical management of renal tumours during 1995,2005: an analysis of the Dutch national histopathology registryBJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 8 2008Intan P.E.D. Kümmerlin OBJECTIVE To evaluate changes in the pathological characteristics, stage of primary renal tumours and their surgical management in the Netherlands during the period 1995,2005. METHODS Extracts from the records of all patients who had surgery for primary renal tumours in the Netherlands during the period 1995,2005 were reviewed. Data were collected from PALGA, the nationwide network and archive of histocytopathology. The 2002 Tumour-Node-Metastasis and the three-tier Fuhrman grade were used for staging and grading. RESULTS In all there were 12 471 operations for primary renal masses during the study period. The incidence of surgically removed renal cancers increased from 6.2 in 1995 to 7.5 cases per 100 000 inhabitants (P = 0.005) in 2005. The mean (sd, median) age of the patients was 63.3 (11.9, 65.0) years, with a male-to-female ratio of 3:2. The mean (sd) tumour size of malignant tumours decreased from 7.3 (3.6) to 6.9 (3.7) cm (P = 0.301). The percentage of benign removed tumours remained relatively stable (P = 0.056), with a mean of 5.4% of all resected tumours. There was an increase of grade 1 tumours; the incidence of T1 tumours increased from 36.6% to 44.2%, and advanced tumours decreased from 46.4% to 33.7%, respectively. The percentage of nephron-sparing surgery increased from 3.5% in 1995 to 10.1% (P = 0.003) in 2005, mainly in the T1a tumours. CONCLUSIONS During the last decade there was an increase in the incidence of surgically treated renal tumours in the Netherlands. Tumours with favourable histopathological characteristics, low stage and grade, accounted for most of this increase. The percentage of surgically removed benign tumours remained stable. The use of nephron-sparing surgery increased during the last decade, especially in T1a tumours. [source] Stones in the lacrimal gland: a rare conditionACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 6 2009Jakob Halborg Abstract. Purpose:, Stones (dacryoliths) in the lacrimal drainage system are relatively common. However, stones in the lacrimal gland itself are very rare. We present three cases of lacrimal gland stones and describe the clinical and histopathological characteristics and composition of the stones. Methods:, Three patients presented with swelling in the lateral canthal region of several months' duration. Clinical examination in each case revealed a mass adjacent to the lacrimal gland. We carried out surgical excision, histological examination and Raman spectroscopy. Results:, Histopathological examination of the excised material showed an eosinophilic, amorphic material organized in lamellae and localized in a ductule. The findings were consistent with a stone in the lacrimal gland in all three cases. All stones were composed of proteins of similar types. After surgery, the three patients healed without complications. Conclusions:, Lacrimal gland stones represent a very rare but relevant differential diagnosis when a patient presents with unilateral persistent conjunctivitis or with a tumour in the lateral canthus. Treatment is excision under local anaesthesia. [source] Granular cell tumour of the lacrimal glandACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2009SL VON HOLSTEIN Purpose To report the clinical and histopathological characteristics of a patient with a granular cell tumour (GCT) of the lacrimal gland. Methods Surgical excision and histological examination. Results A 38-year old male presented with a painful swelling located temporally in the right upper eyelid. Clinical examination revealed proptosis and displacement of the right eye and a tumour was palpated at the site of the lacrimal gland. MRI scan revealed a solid tumour in the lacrimal fossa. The tumour was excised. Microscopically the tumour was composed of tumour cells with coarsely granular cytoplasm. The tumour cells were arranged in clusters and ribbons separated by collagen bundles and no necrosis or mitosis were present. The granules were PAS positive, diastase resistant and the tumour cells expressed focal staining for S100. Electron microscopy showed numerous secondary lysosomes. The diagnosis is consistent with a GCT. Conclusion This case presents for the first time a GCT of the lacrimal gland. [source] |