Cases reported "Gastrointestinal Diseases"

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1/3. Inflammatory pseudotumor of the alimentary tract: clinical and surgical experience.

    BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: Initially described in 1937, inflammatory pseudotumor (IPT) inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) or plasma cell granulomas are synonymous for an inflammatory solid tumor that contains spindle cells, myofibroblasts, plasma cells, and histocytes. Common sites of presentation include lung, mesentary, liver, and spleen; intestinal presentations are rare, and the etiology remains obscure. This report details the clinical and surgical experiences in 4 children with alimentary tract IPT at a single institution. methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted of pediatric patients with the pathologic diagnosis of IPT. RESULTS: Between 1990 and 1999, 4 patients (4 girls, ages 5 to 15 years) were identified with gastrointestinal tract origins of IPT. Symptoms at presentation included anemia (n = 4), intermittent abdominal pain (n = 3), fever (n = 3), weight loss (n = 2), diarrhea (n = 2), dysphagia (n = 1). Two patients had comorbid conditions of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and mature B cell lymphoma. Three of 4 patients had elevated sedimentation rates. The sites of origin were the gastroesophageal junction, the colon, the rectum, and the appendix, with the referral diagnosis achalasia, perforated appendix, inflammatory bowel disease, and recurrent lymphoma, respectively. All were treated with aggressive surgical resection, and 3 girls have had no recurrences since the initial surgery. One patient had 3 recurrences within 8 months of presentation; she remains disease free 8 years later. CONCLUSIONS: IPT, although rare in the gastrointestinal tract, mimics more common problems. Successful surgical management is possible even in cases of multiple recurrences.
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ranking = 1
keywords = spindle cell, spindle
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2/3. Reactive nodular fibrous pseudotumors of the gastrointestinal tract: report of 8 cases.

    Eight cases of reactive nodular fibrous pseudotumor of the gastrointestinal tract are presented. The patients included 6 males and 2 females between the ages of 1 and 68 years (mean age 41.5 years). Three tumors involved the small intestine, and 5 of the investigated lesions were located in the large bowel. Of these, 2 originated in the sigmoid colon, 1 in the cecum, 1 in the appendix, and 1 in the large bowel not otherwise specified. The tumors' size varied from 3 to 10 cm in the greatest diameter (mean 6.2 cm). Histologically they were composed of stellate or spindle shaped cells resembling fibroblasts arranged haphazardly or in intersecting fascicles, embedded in a collagen-rich stroma, with sparse intralesional mononuclear cells frequently arranged in lymphoid aggregates. Immunohistochemically, the lesions were positive for vimentin (7/7), smooth muscle actin (8/8), muscle-specific actin (5/7), cytokeratins AE1/AE3 (6/7), and CAM 5.2 (1/7), and antigen CD68 (1/7). No case (0/8) reacted positively with antibody to CD117 (c-kit). Genetically no substitutions, deletions, or insertions occurred in exon 11 in all analyzed samples. Likewise, no deletions or insertions in part of exon 9 were observed. Ultrastructurally the tumor cells revealed features typical of myofibroblasts. According to the morphologic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features mentioned above, especially to the positivity of low-molecular-weight cytokeratins, we propose this lesion to be related to a proliferation of multipotential subserosal cells rather than ordinary myofibroblasts or fibroblasts.
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ranking = 0.21794242380288
keywords = spindle
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3/3. An autopsy case of Farber's lipogranulomatosis in a Japanese boy with gastrointestinal involvement.

    A boy with Farber's lipogranulomatosis is reported. Excessive ceramide was revealed by thin-layer chromatography of the extracts from the liver. acid ceramidase activity of the liver was 31.5% of control with exogenous substrate and 33.3% without exogenous substrate. The histological appearance showed granulomatous lesions, composed of spindle or oval-shaped storage cells and proliferation of the connective tissues, in the subcutaneous tissue of the lower lip, periarticular regions and the pericardium. Histochemically the storage cells were revealed to contain lipid and polysaccharide. The foreign body granuloma formed by the surgical suture in the liver was surrounded by a large number of foamy cells. In gastrointestinal mucosa widespread erosion, disappearance of glands and abundant collagen fibers were noted. On electron microscopy, the spindle or oval-shaped cells in the subcutis of the lip had intracytoplasmic inclusions containing granular or fibrillar materials and a smaller number of curvilinear structures, so called "Farber bodies". Our case was a typical clinical and histopathological presentation of Farber's lipogranulomatosis. However, ceramidase activity was higher than in previous descriptions, and severe gastrointestinal lesions and the appearance of a large number of foamy cells around the foreign body granuloma have not been described previously.
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ranking = 0.43588484760576
keywords = spindle
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