Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine
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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · May 2005
Case ReportsSwyer-James (MacLeod) syndrome with placental transmogrification of the lung: a case report and review of the literature.
Swyer-James (MacLeod) syndrome is an acquired form of unilateral hyperlucency of the lung and is characterized by the development of severe emphysema, bronchiectasis, and/or bronchiolitis obliterans. It may develop as a complication of repeated episodes of pulmonary infection resulting in bronchiolitis obliterans and obstruction of small airways. Most patients with Swyer-James (MacLeod) syndrome can be managed clinically, and the pathologic features of the syndrome have been described in only a few reports. ⋯ The patient underwent a right pneumonectomy. Examination of the lung revealed severe mixed centriacinar-panacinar emphysema in all lobes, bullous emphysema in the upper lobe, bronchiectases, mild interstitial pneumonia with fibrosis, and placental transmogrification of the pulmonary parenchyma of all 3 lobes. Here, we review the pathology of Swyer-James (MacLeod) syndrome and the possible pathogenesis of villous-like changes in the lung tissues.
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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Jan 2005
Case ReportsIntracranial peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors of the cavernous sinus: a diagnostic peculiarity.
Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors (pPNETs) are aggressive, poorly differentiated neoplasms that occur in children and young adults. These tumors are associated with a peak incidence in the second decade and a slight male preponderance. Recently, Ewing sarcoma and pPNET tumors have been proven to carry identical translocations, the most common being t(11;22)(q24;q12). ⋯ Fluorescence in situ hybridization did not show translocations associated with Ewing sarcoma/pPNET. However, a small percentage of these tumors can be negative for this translocation. In these cases, histology and immunohistochemical techniques in the absence of an alternative diagnosis are the only tools available to establish the diagnosis.
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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Dec 2004
Review Case ReportsPulmonary and ophthalmic involvement with Erdheim-Chester disease: a case report and review of the literature.
Erdheim-Chester disease is a rare nonfamilial histiocytic disorder of unknown etiology with characteristic long bone findings. The 3-year survival rate for patients with Erdheim-Chester disease is 50%. Approximately 50% of patients have disease involvement in other tissues, including skin, retro-orbital and periorbital tissues, pituitary-hypothalamic axis, heart, kidney, retroperitoneum, breast, skeletal muscle, and sinonasal mucosa; about 20% of patients have lung involvement. ⋯ Characteristic lung histopathology includes the accumulation of histiocytes with variable amounts of fibrosis and a variable lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate in a lymphangitic distribution. Immunostains are diagnostically useful, showing immunopositivity for CD68 and factor XIIIa and immunonegativity for CD1a. Birbeck granules are uniformly absent ultrastructurally.