Cases reported "Leiomyoma"

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1/388. Leiomyoma of the uterus showing skeletal muscle differentiation: a case report.

    A case of uterine leiomyoma with skeletal muscle differentiation is described. The patient is a 40-year-old woman who underwent abdominal hysterectomy and left salpingo-oophorectomy for fibroids. Evidence of skeletal muscle differentiation was evident at light and electron microscopy in one out of three "ordinary" leiomyomas. This was also shown by positive immunoreactions with antiskeletal muscle actin and myoglobin antisera. To our knowledge, this is the second case reported of the occurrence of skeletal muscle differentiation within a uterine leiomyoma and highlights the divergent differentiating potential of smooth muscle cells.
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2/388. Primary orbital leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma.

    A case of an extremely rare primary orbital leiomyoma in a 25-year-old male patient is presented who had a lifelong history of deviation of the left eye globe with slight enophthalmos and reduced motility. Because of pain and increasing deviation of the eye the tumor was totally resected. On histologic examination the tumor showed ossification which is extremely rare so that a calcifying fibroma had to be ruled out. In immunohistochemistry, however, this tumor stained with smooth muscle antigen. Less than 2% of cells stained positive for Ki-S1, a proliferation marker. The second case is a rare primary orbital leiomyosarcoma in an 84-year-old female patient that showed massive growth. After exenteration histologic examination showed a dedifferentiated highly malignant soft tissue tumor which expressed desmin and smooth muscle actin but was negative for myoglobin, S-100 and HMB-45.
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3/388. Intravascular fasciitis of the forearm vein: a case report with immunohistochemical characterization.

    Intravascular fasciitis is a very unusual variant of nodular fasciitis. A unique case of this lesion occurring in the proximal portion of the superficial vein of the forearm in an otherwise healthy 26-year-old man is reported. The intravascular polypoid lesion grew longitudinally along the vascular lumen, was loosely attached to the intimal layer, and was partly anchored beyond the internal elastic lamina into the medial smooth muscle layer. However, extravascular involvement was absent. The histological features were identical to those observed in ordinary cellular nodular fasciitis. Because of its myofibroblastic phenotype exhibited by highly proliferative spindle cells, certain intimomedial myofibroblasts are thought to be the indigenous source of this unique fibroproliferative lesion. Unless the diagnosis of intravascular fasciitis is considered and appropriate differential markers examined, it may be confused with other intravascular lesions, such as intravascular leiomyoma, intravenous pyogenic granuloma, organized thrombus and, even, fibromuscular dysplasia if it arises in the arteries. A simple excision is considered curable. Even so, two recurrent cases have been documented to date.
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ranking = 37.192959922547
keywords = spindle cell, spindle, cell
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4/388. Cytogenetic and CGH studies of four neuroendocrine tumors and tumor-derived cell lines of a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1.

    A malignant insulinoma (LOHG-I), a carcinoid of the lung (LOHG-L), a parathyroid adenoma (LOHG-NSA), and a fibroma (LOHG-F) were obtained from a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1). Long-term cultures were established. Essential neurobiological properties of the cell lines were proven immunocytochemically and by electron microscopy. Molecular analysis of the germline dna showed a 4 bp deletion in exon 3 of the MEN1 gene. Cytogenetic and CGH analyses of the tumors/tumor cell lines revealed diploidy and balanced and unbalanced structural aberrations different for each tumor. chromosomes 6q21, 11q and 17q were most frequently involved in clonal structural aberrations.
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5/388. Combined clear and granular cell leiomyoma of soft tissue: evidence of transformation to a histiocytic phenotype.

    AIMS: We present an unusual case of leiomyoma with a clear and granular cell pattern in which there was immunohistochemical evidence of transformation to a histiocytic phenotype. methods AND RESULTS: A 64-year-old man presented with mild scrotal swelling and pain. A local excision was performed after the clinical diagnosis of epidermal inclusion cyst. In the pathological specimen, another tumour nodule was identified which was composed predominantly of clear cells, with an occasional mixture of granular cells. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated positive staining for vimentin, lysozyme, CD68 and HAM56, but complete negativity for desmin, alpha-smooth muscle actin, HHF35, S100 protein, neurone-specific enolase and CD34. Ultrastructural study revealed dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum, glycogen granules, abundant vacuolar structures and also thin microfilaments with subplasmalemmal dense bodies. CONCLUSIONS: Based on these findings, we have interpreted it to be a rare case of leiomyoma with extensive clear cell and granular cell degeneration (combined clear and granular cell leiomyoma). This complete transformation of the immunohistochemical profile into the histiocytic phenotype has not been previously described in the literature.
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6/388. Leiomyoma with atypical cells (atypical leiomyoma) in the larynx.

    AIMS: To report and confirm the identity of laryngeal leiomyoma with many atypical cells, which has not been described previously. CASE DETAILS: A 53-year-old man was found to have a polypoid tumour in the larynx. The tumour was excised and the patient has shown no evidence of recurrence over a 5-year period. The tumour tissue comprised intersecting fascicles of spindle-shaped tumour cells with blunt-ended nuclei. Many of the tumour cells showed marked atypia. Mitotic activity in the tumour cells was low, and no atypical mitoses were found. Immunohistochemically, the tumour cells were positive for smooth muscle actin and desmin. p53 overexpression was identified in many tumour cells; the p53 labelling index of the tumour cells was 45%. dna from tumour cells showed loss of heterozygosity on chromosomes 3p, 5q, 8p, 9p, 10q, 17p and 18q. We diagnosed this case as leiomyoma with atypical cells (atypical leiomyoma) based on the clinical course and pathological and genetic findings. CONCLUSION: This is the first report of atypical leiomyoma in the larynx. The clinical course and pathological findings indicate that although laryngeal atypical leiomyoma contains numerous atypical cells, it is a benign neoplasm.
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ranking = 22.051472115966
keywords = spindle, cell
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7/388. Primary smooth muscle tumor of the liver encasing hepatobiliary cystadenoma without mesenchymal stroma.

    We describe a 59-year-old Japanese woman with a large mass of her liver encasing cystic components. Radiologic imaging showed the mass to be hypervascular, and surgical resection disclosed a white tumor. The solid portion was immunohistochemically characterized as a smooth muscle tumor. The cystic components were multilocular and lined with columnar epithelium, consistent with a hepatobiliary cystadenoma. The epithelium strongly stained for CA19-9. The subepithelial space was occupied by collagenous connective tissue interspersed with a small number of spindle-shaped cells. The cystic lesions lacked the mesenchymal stroma between the epithelium and connective tissue layer. There have been no previous reports of a hepatic smooth muscle tumor encasing a hepatobiliary cystadenoma. Because of the pathogenesis of the cystadenoma, it is possible to assume that the smooth muscle tumor also arose from the cells composing the biliary duct in association with the development of the cystadenoma.
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ranking = 10.051472115966
keywords = spindle, cell
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8/388. Case of the month: March 1999--A 26 year old hiv positive male with dura based masses.

    A 26-year-old male with AIDS presented with a chief complaint of headaches and neck pain. An MRI revealed two enhancing extra-axial dura based masses, one in the area of the left sphenoid wing and one at the level of C2-3. In both cases, microscopic sections showed actin positive spindle cell neoplasms with long slender nuclei, consistent with leiomyomas. Both tumors were positive for Epstein Barr virus by in situ hybridization. This case report serves to emphasize the importance of considering soft tissue tumors such as leiomyoma in the differential diagnosis of mass lesions that occur in the central nervous system in AIDS and discusses the role of EBV in tumorigenesis.
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ranking = 36.192959922547
keywords = spindle cell, spindle, cell
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9/388. Exfoliative cytology of atypical polypoid adenomyoma. A case report.

    BACKGROUND: An atypical polypoid adenomyoma (APA) is a well-defined entity. It occurs in the endometrium, lower uterine segment and endocervix. It is usually composed of atypical complex glands with squamous metaplasia admixed with myofibromatous stroma. CASE: A 35-year-old female presented with one-year history of irregular menstrual periods. A diagnosis of adenocarcinoma in situ was rendered on her cervicovaginal smear. Pelvic examination revealed an enlarged uterus due to a leiomyoma. Colposcopic examination revealed a 0.6-cm, sessile, polypoid mass at the junction of the endocervix and ectocervix. A cone biopsy of the lesion showed irregular, endometrial-type glands embedded in a prominent myofibromatous stroma. The atypical glandular component of the mass demonstrated varying degrees of architectural complexity, ranging from simple to complex hyperplasia. In tissue sections the lesion was diagnosed as APA of the cervix. The patient underwent a hysterectomy for the leiomyoma. The hysterectomy specimen showed an 8.5-cm leiomyoma. The cervix and uterine corpus revealed no residual APA. CONCLUSION: APA of the cervix should be considered among the differential diagnoses of atypical glandular cells of undetermined significance. The diagnosis of APA cannot be made on cytology; the final diagnosis requires histologic confirmation.
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10/388. Pulmonary leiomyomatosis in women after hysterectomy for uterine myoma. Benign metastasizing leiomyoma?

    INTRODUCTION: Leiomyomas, which usually occur multilocular in uterus, can develop even if rarely in other organs with smooth muscle cells. The tumour is considered benign; 2 case reports supports the hypothesis that uterus myoma could metastasize, and in the metastasis sites grow invasively. methods: 2 female patients 44 y. and 29 y. old were admitted to our clinic for MPL. Due to increasing tumor size respectively dypnea, they were operated on. Multiple nodules of the left lung in one case, and a mediastinal tumour in the other were resected; resected tumour was histologically examined. RESULTS: In both cases it was a matter of well-differentiated leiomyosarcoma. The mediastinal tumour has already invade the N. phrenicus. Postoperatively there were no complications. patients discharged in well-doing state, medical control one year later revealed no new growth. CONCLUSION: Multiple pulmonary leiomyomas are rare, they occur in sexually mature women in coincidence with uterus myoma. Even though many authors assume that MPL is a lung metastasis of benign tumours, the pathogenesis is still hypothetical. Supporting this thesis is the hormone dependence of both the uterine and the pulmonary tumours; against it, is that extrapulmonary locations are too rarely observed. The still open pathogenetical question has no therapeutical consequence. Whenever technically possible, a radical, parenchyma-saving surgical therapy should be the first choice. Otherwise hormon-ablation is a good alternative.
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