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1/31. Desmoplastic spindle-cell melanoma of the eyelid with orbital invasion.

    PURPOSE: To describe the clinicopathologic features of a patient with a spindle-cell melanoma of the eyelid that exhibited orbital invasion. methods: Case report. RESULTS: A slowly enlarging mass developed in the eyelid of a 50-year-old woman. Excision of the mass showed desmoplastic spindle-cell melanoma. The tumor recurred in the orbit, and an exenteration was performed. A second recurrence 7 months later was treated with radiation therapy. CONCLUSIONS: There is a continuum of spindle-cell to desmoplastic melanoma. The prognosis of patients with orbital invasion of melanoma is poor, and adjuvant treatment including radiation and chemotherapy has little benefit.
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ranking = 1
keywords = spindle, cell
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2/31. Plexiform spitz nevus: an intradermal spitz nevus with plexiform growth pattern.

    Two cases of a distinctive variant of Spitz (spindle and epithelioid cell) nevus are described. One lesion developed on the lower leg of a 17-year-old boy and the other lesion on the back of a 52-year-old man. The microscopic appearance was characterized by a plexiform arrangement of bundles and lobules of enlarged spindle to epithelioid melanocytes throughout the superficial and deep dermis. Intraepidermal melanocytic proliferation was unappreciated. Some lobules were circumscribed by a thin rim of compressed fibrous tissue. In both cases a myxoid stroma was present. The cells had abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm with well-defined borders. The nuclei were enlarged, consistently ovoid and vesicular, with small nucleoli. Both cases contained scattered multinucleate giant cells similar to those observed in classical form of Spitz nevi. No melanin pigment was detectable by light microscopy. No mitoses were observed in one case and a rare mitosis was present in the other. Tumor cells were strongly immunoreactive for S-100, but not for HMB-45, desmin, and actin. The differential diagnosis of this distinctive tumor includes desmoplastic/neurotropic melanoma, plexiform spindle cell nevus, cellular blue nevus, plexiform neurofibroma, and cellular neurothekeoma. The designation of "plexiform Spitz nevus" is chosen to emphasize its distinctive plexiform growth pattern.
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ranking = 706.52822267488
keywords = spitz, spindle cell, spindle, cell
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3/31. Polypoid Spitz naevus: the benign counterpart of polypoid malignant melanoma.

    Polypoid malignant melanoma is a peculiar morphological variant of melanoma with a distinct exophytic pattern of growth. This form of melanoma is usually very thick and the prognosis is accordingly poor. We present here a previously undescribed form of Spitz naevus which had a similar polypoid exophytic silhouette and marked cytological atypia. Despite these close morphological similarities, polypoid Spitz naevus evolves in a completely benign manner. Morphologically, polypoid Spitz naevus can be distinguished from polypoid melanoma by the absence of mitoses and by the prominent stromal reaction throughout the lesion.
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ranking = 159.66122890353
keywords = naevus
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4/31. Juvenile xanthogranuloma variant: a clinicopathological case report and review of the literature.

    Juvenile xanthogranuloma is a relatively rare cutaneous lesion. In order to make an early diagnosis and be alert to the possibility of visceral complications and associated medical conditions, plastic surgeons should be aware of the entity. The classic presentation is that of successive eruptions in the head, neck and upper trunk of initially red papules or nodules which later become yellow and finally brown flattened plaques or macules. This report is of an unusual variant with atypical histology including frequent mitoses and a lack of Touton giant cells.
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ranking = 0.0041360911133948
keywords = cell
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5/31. A case of combined nevus: compound nevus and spindle cell Spitz nevus.

    Combined nevi consisting of a Spitz nevus and an acquired nevus are unusual, and, to our knowledge, the combination of a spindle cell Spitz nevus and an overlying compound nevus has not been previously reported. We report a 17-year-old girl with a nodule on the left anterior lower extremity. The nodule was asymptomatic, firm, brown, symmetrical, dome-shaped, 8 mm in diameter, and not found with ulceration. Histological findings showed proliferation of spindle-shaped cells with an overlying compound nevus. The spindle-shaped cells were large, non-pigmented, uniform in size and shape, with rare mitoses and without nuclear atypia, and arranged in a storiform pattern in thick collagen bundles. They stained positively for S-100 and negatively for HMB-45. The lesion was considered to be a new type of combined nevus consisting of a spindle cell Spitz nevus and an overlying compound nevus.
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ranking = 2.6187644703612
keywords = spindle cell, spindle, cell
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6/31. Hyalinizing Spitz nevus.

    A seventeen-year-old Korean girl had a reddish-brown papular lesion on the nose. Histopathologically, it proved to be a "hyalinizing Spitz nevus" with the characteristic features of a discohesive growth pattern of nevus cells and hyalinized stroma. Immunohistochemical stains showed positive reactivity of nevus cells with S-100 protein and vimentin and negative stainings with HMB45, CD68, CEA and low molecular weight cytokeratin. Hyalinizing Spitz nevus may represent a variant in the spectrum of Spitz nevus.
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ranking = 0.0082721822267897
keywords = cell
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7/31. Epithelioid blue nevus: a rare variant of blue nevus not always associated with the carney complex.

    Epithelioid blue nevus is a rare variant of blue nevus that has been recently described in patients with carney complex. Some of the patients with carney complex have multiple epithelioid blue nevi and a familial history of similar lesions is often recorded. Epithelioid blue nevus consists of an intradermal melanocytic nevus composed of polygonal epithelioid cells laden with melanin. Neoplastic cells show no maturation at the base of the lesion and, in contrast with the usual stromal changes in blue nevi, epithelioid blue nevus exhibits no fibrosis of the dermis. We have studied three cases of epithelioid blue nevus in three patients with no evidence of carney complex. The lesions were solitary and there was no family history of similar lesions. Therefore, epithelioid blue nevus is a distinctive variant of blue nevus that may also appear as a sporadic lesion and is not always associated with carney complex.
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ranking = 0.0082721822267897
keywords = cell
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8/31. Spitzoid malignant melanoma in teenagers: an entity with no better prognosis than that of other forms of melanoma.

    AIMS: A rare form of melanoma in teenagers closely simulates Spitz naevus and is claimed to have a good prognosis. The aim of this study is to identify the clues for a confident diagnosis of this entity and to confirm the peculiarly good prognosis. methods AND RESULTS: Two cases of melanoma with Spitzoid features were compared with Spitz naevus and it was found that the major distinctive criteria are: mitoses and single cell necrosis in the deepest part of the lesion, cellular and particularly nuclear and nucleolar pleomorphism, and growth pattern in solid sheets of cells. More subtle clues were the asymmetric distribution of pigment and the thinning of the epidermis with parakeratosis and exudate in the cornified layer. Both of the lesions reached the mid-dermis. There was a fatal outcome in both patients after generalized metastatic spread. The metastatic disease in one of the cases appeared 15 years after the excision of the primary lesion. CONCLUSIONS: Spitzoid melanoma in teenagers can be distinguished from Spitz naevus if strict criteria are followed. Spitzoid melanoma does not show a better prognosis than other types of melanoma if the follow-up is prolonged enough.
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ranking = 68.438649231996
keywords = naevus, cell
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9/31. Spitzoid malignant melanoma with lymph-node metastasis. Is a copy-number loss on chromosome 6q a marker of malignancy?

    Distinction of spitzoid malignant melanomas (SMM) from Spitz nevi may be difficult or even impossible on the basis of conventional histology. In this report, a patient suffering from a primary lesion diagnosed as a Spitz nevus and a metastatic malignant melanoma approximately 4 years thereafter is described. A diagnosis of SMM was made subsequently upon review of the primary lesion. In the present analysis, we used comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) to define markers characteristic of SMM. The primary lesion revealed deletions on chromosomes 6q and 9p. In the metastasis, additional deletions on chromosomes 10p and 10q and gains of chromosome 7 were found. To our knowledge, no chromosomal aberration on chromosome 6 was hitherto demonstrated in benign melanocytic nevi. Findings reported in the literature suggest that human melanoma metastasis suppressor gene maps to 6q. In contrast, losses on chromosome 9p seem to be an early event in the development of melanoma. However, they are not only found in melanomas but are occasionally present in Spitz nevi as well as in atypical nevi. The CGH result with deletion of 6q in this difficult to diagnose primary melanocytic lesion strongly supports the diagnosis of malignant melanoma. To demonstrate the reliability of loss on chromosome 6q as a marker of SMM, a larger number of lesions must be investigated.
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ranking = 88.229640290908
keywords = spitz
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10/31. Congenital giant melanocytic nevus with pigmented epithelioid cells: a variant of epithelioid blue nevus.

    Epithelioid-cell blue nevus is an unusual cytologic variant of blue nevus that has been recently described mostly in patients with carney complex, although the lesion may also appear in patients with no evidence of carney complex. This variant of blue nevus is composed of melanin laden large polygonal epithelioid melanocytes situated within the dermis. The neoplastic cells show no maturation with progressive descent and, in contrast with the usual stromal changes in blue nevi, epithelioid-cell blue nevus exhibits no dermal fibrosis. This report describes a congenital giant melanocytic nevus with pigmented epithelioid cells located on the back of a 2-year-old male. The lesion was present at birth and the patient had no evidence of carney complex. Histopathologically, the lesion consisted of a large and entirely intradermal melanocytic nevus composed of heavily pigmented epithelioid melanocytes involving the full-thickness of dermis, but extending also to the subcutaneous fat and underlying soft tissues. Immunohistochemically, epithelioid neoplastic melanocytes expressed immunoreactivity for S-100 protein, HMB-45, Melan-A, NK1C3, and microphthalmia transcription factor (MiTF) antibodies. MIB-1 cellular proliferation marker was expressed in the nuclei of only a few scattered epithelioid melanocytes. This report demonstrates that epithelioid-cell blue nevus is a distinctive histopathologic variant of blue nevus that may also appear as a giant congenital melanocytic nevus.
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ranking = 0.041360911133948
keywords = cell
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