The American journal of surgical pathology
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Feb 2004
Comparative StudyPatterns of inflammation in mucosal biopsies of ulcerative colitis: perceived differences in pediatric populations are limited to children younger than 10 years.
The histologic criteria used to diagnose ulcerative colitis in colonic mucosal biopsies have been established for many years and include crypt architectural distortion, plasmacellular infiltrates, and neutrophils in the crypt epithelium and lumen. In several recent studies, it has been noted that colonic mucosal biopsies from children presenting with ulcerative colitis show fewer histologic abnormalities at initial presentation, especially less architectural distortion, than do biopsies from adults. In this study, colonic mucosal biopsies taken at the time of presentation of ulcerative colitis in 15 adults and 25 children were examined blindly by two pathologists. ⋯ The findings show for the first time that the perceived differences between adults and children with ulcerative colitis are largely due to a decrease in histologic features of colitis in children less than 10 years of age. As children approach adulthood, the degree of inflammation and architectural distortion seen is similar to that found in adults. However, rectal biopsies show similar degrees of colitis in all age groups.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Jan 2004
Most osteomalacia-associated mesenchymal tumors are a single histopathologic entity: an analysis of 32 cases and a comprehensive review of the literature.
Oncogenic osteomalacia (OO) is a rare paraneoplastic syndrome of osteomalacia due to phosphate wasting. The phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor (mixed connective tissue variant) (PMTMCT) is an extremely rare, distinctive tumor that is frequently associated with OO. Despite its association with OO, many PMTMCTs go unrecognized because they are erroneously diagnosed as other mesenchymal tumors. ⋯ Improved recognition of their histologic spectrum, including the presence of bone or osteoid-like matrix in otherwise typical cases and the existence of malignant forms, should allow distinction from other mesenchymal tumors. Recognition of PMTMCT is critical, as complete resection cures intractable OO. Immunohistochemistry and RT-PCR for FGF-23 confirm the role of this protein in PMTMCT-associated OO.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Jan 2004
Comparative StudyOral plasmablastic lymphomas in AIDS patients are associated with human herpesvirus 8.
Human herpes virus type 8 (HHV8) has been strongly associated with Kaposi sarcoma, primary effusion lymphoma (PEL), and Castleman's disease. To our knowledge, infection by this virus has not been strongly associated with other hematopathologic malignancies. We examined five oral cavity lymphomas from men with AIDS for HHV8 and HIV-1 by reverse transcriptase in situ polymerase chain reaction, as well as for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) (EBER-1, -2) using in situ hybridization and HHV8 protein with immunohistochemistry. ⋯ In comparison, HHV8 RNA was not detected in any of the five oral cavity lymphomas from people who did not have acquired immunosuppression nor in five lymphomas from AIDS patients that were located at a site other than the oral cavity. It is concluded that oral cavity lymphomas from people with AIDS are strongly associated with infection by HHV8 and EBV. Given the poor prognosis of oral cavity lymphomas in immunocompromised patients, therapy directed against the HHV8 and EBV infection may be of therapeutic value.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Jan 2004
Airway-centered interstitial fibrosis: a distinct form of aggressive diffuse lung disease.
We describe 12 patients with a form of interstitial lung disease characterized pathologically by small airway-centered interstitial fibrosis and metaplastic bronchiolar epithelium extending around and often linking fibrotic and sometimes heavily muscularized bronchioles. Clinically, patients presented with chronic cough and progressive dyspnea. One was a current light smoker and two were ex-smokers. ⋯ In 5 patients, the disease progressed and 4 of them died. Two patients remained stable and 3 improved or healed. We propose that these findings represent a distinct airway-centered disease that mostly behaves as an interstitial lung disease and may exhibit a poor outcome.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Nov 2003
Prevalence of human papillomavirus type 16 DNA in squamous cell carcinoma of the palatine tonsil, and not the oral cavity, in young patients: a distinct clinicopathologic and molecular disease entity.
Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck commonly affects patients in their sixth decade and older, particularly those with a prolonged history of alcohol and tobacco abuse. Less frequently, carcinomas occur in young individuals even in the absence of known risk factors. The purpose of this study is to investigate a possible relationship between these tumors and human papilloma virus (HPV). ⋯ HPV-positive tumors had a distinct nonkeratinizing basal cell morphology, they stained diffusely and strongly with p16 antibodies, had higher Ki-67 and lower p53 staining scores as compared with the conventional keratinizing HPV negative carcinomas. It is concluded that in young patients high-risk HPV, particularly HPV16, is strongly associated with tonsillar squamous cell carcinoma and some cases of laryngeal, but not oral, tumors. The HPV-positive carcinomas have a distinct histopathologic and immunophenotypic features.