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- Kyueng-Whan Min, Ho Young Jung, Hye Seung Han, Tae Sook Hwang, Sung-Yong Kim, Wan Seop Kim, So Dug Lim, and Wook Youn Kim.
- Department of Pathology, Kangbuk Samsung Hospital, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
- APMIS. 2015 Jan 1;123(1):81-6.
AbstractHemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a rare life-threatening hyperinflammatory syndrome characterized by activated macrophages engulfing erythrocytes, leukocytes, platelets, and their precursor cells in bone marrow, liver, spleen, or lymph nodes. We report a case of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated HLH unusually presenting as an ileal mass. A 23-year-old man presented initially with persistent fever unresponsive to antibiotics and pancytopenia. A bone marrow aspiration and biopsy were used to diagnose the patient with aplastic anemia and HLH. A relatively well-defined low-density mass was radiologically noted in the terminal ileum, along with enlarged lymph nodes, and was suspected to be malignant lymphoma or an abscess. The ileocecectomy specimen revealed a transmural hemorrhagic infarction with numerous activated macrophages phagocytosing erythrocytes, plasma cells, and lymphocytes, and he was diagnosed with EBV-associated HLH. The patient received an allo-unrelated peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation and expired due to graft-versus-host disease following liver failure. The present case is very unique, in that EBV-associated HLH presented with an unusual ileal mass resulting from hemorrhagic infarction in a patient with aplastic anemia, suggesting variability in the biological behavior of EBV-associated disease.© 2014 APMIS. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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