Cases reported "Adenocarcinoma"

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1/29. Mammary Paget's disease with acantholytic features and without any detectable breast tumor.

    Paget's disease is usually associated with an underlying adenocarcinoma of the breast. The initial manifestation is an eczematous or psoriasiform lesion of the nipple, soon extending to the mammary areola and then to the surrounding skin. The histology of the lesions is characterized by the presence, within the epidermal layer, of the so-called Paget's cells, i.e. large cells with vesicular nucleus and clear cytoplasm. The authors report a recent case of Paget's disease of the breast in a 75-year-old woman, unusual both for clinical course and observed histology. As for the clinico-evolutive aspects, although in the case observed the initial skin lesions appeared 20 years before, the different diagnostic procedures repeatedly performed showed no evidence in this patient of an underlying adenocarcinoma. The histologic aspect, on the other hand, was peculiar since the typical characteristics of an acantholytic disease were evident. The presence of intraepidermal cleavages with lost, at times, of the normal contacts among the cells of the Malpighian layer has been described only once in Paget's disease. This fact caused some diagnostic difficulties: however, the typical finding of the Paget cells, their positivity to histochemical methods such as cytokeratin and acid phosphatase allowed the diagnosis. The authors, at last, evaluate the need of a surgical therapy in Paget's disease of the breast without an underlying adenocarcinoma.
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2/29. CEA-producing mucin-negative gastric signet-ring cell carcinoma with neuroendocrine markers: a case report.

    biopsy and autopsy materials excised from a 69-year-old woman were investigated. serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) showed a high value of 955 ng/mL. A plateaulike tumor was located in the gastric cardia and fundus to the entire gastric body. It showed severe proliferation and infiltration from the mucosa to the serosa. The tumor was comprised of signet-ring cells and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells, which spread into the submucosa of the pylorus, duodenum, and jejunum. Signet-ring cells had a large, eccentric vesicular nucleus and a pale cytoplasmic inclusion. Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells had a pleomorphic nucleus, small eosinophilic nucleolus, and abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm. Both neoplastic cells were positive for CEA, epithelial membrane antigen, Leu-7 (CD57), and neuron-specific enolase, and were negative for cytokeratin, vimentin, and periodic acid-Schiff, alcian blue, and mucicarmine stains. Electron microscopy showed endocrine granules with a limiting membrane measuring approximately 238 nm in diameter in the cytoplasm. The authors diagnosed this patient as having mucin-negative gastric signet-ring cell carcinoma with neuroendocrine markers, which is suggested to exist among poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, undifferentiated carcinoma, and signet-ring cell carcinoma.
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3/29. An immunohistochemical study on a case of granulocyte-colony stimulating factor-producing gall-bladder carcinoma.

    Primary gall-bladder carcinoma producing granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (GCSF) is extremely rare. Only four cases, histologically investigated, have been reported to date in the English literature. We report a case of a 48-year-old female with primary gall-bladder carcinoma, associating with leukocytosis (15 700/mm3) and a high level of serum GCSF (54.0 pg/mL). The tumor was, histologically, a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with marked interspersed neutrophils invading into the primary tumor itself and the right lobe of the liver. Tumor cells distinctly showed positive immunoreaction in the cytoplasm with anti-GCSF antibody, and in the nucleus for anti-p53 antibody. After surgery, the leukocytosis and serum level of GCSF began to decrease. These findings confirmed the present case of GCSF-producing gall-bladder carcinoma, exhibiting leukocytosis. A total of five cases, including our case, reported as a GCSF-producing gall-bladder carcinoma were clinicopathologically reviewed.
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4/29. Positron emission tomography study of a chronic pain patient successfully treated with somatosensory thalamic stimulation.

    Previous neuroimaging studies suggested that the neuronal network underlying the perception of chronic pain may differ from that underlying acute pain. To further map the neural network associated with chronic pain, we used positron emission tomography (PET) to determine significant regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) changes in a patient with chronic facial pain. The patient is implanted with a chronic stimulation electrode in the left ventroposterior medial thalamic nucleus with which he can completely suppress his chronic pain. The patient was scanned in the following conditions: before thalamic stimulation (pain, no stimulation), during thalamic stimulation (no pain, stimulation) and after successful thalamic stimulation (no pain, no stimulation). Comparing baseline scans during pain with scans taken after stimulation, when the patient had become pain-free, revealed significant rCBF increases in the prefrontal (Brodmann areas (BA) 9, 10, 11 and 47) and anterior insular cortices, hypothalamus and periaqueductal gray associated with the presence of chronic pain. No significant rCBF changes occurred in thalamus, primary and secondary somatosensory cortex and anterior cingulate cortex, BA 24'. Significant rCBF decreases were observed in the substantia nigra/nucleus ruber and in the anterior pulvinar nucleus. During thalamic stimulation, blood flow significantly increased in the amygdala and anterior insular cortex. These data further support that there are important differences in the cerebral processing of acute and chronic pain.
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5/29. Fine needle aspiration cytology of adenocarcinoma of the rectovaginal septum. A case report.

    BACKGROUND: adenocarcinoma arising in the rectovaginal septum is exceedingly rare and is difficult to diagnose by pathologic examination prior to surgery because of the anatomic position of the tumor. CASE: A 42-year-old woman presumed to have adenocarcinoma of the rectovaginal septum underwent fine needle aspiration for diagnosis. Although a previously performed biopsy from the posterior vaginal fornix was unsuccessful, fine needle aspiration cytology via the posterior vaginal wall detected adenocarcinoma cells. The cell clusters were composed of cells with enlarged and hyperchromatic nuclei. The nuclei themselves demonstrated round and/or irregular morphologic patterns, with high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratios, and often contained an enlarged, round nucleolus and sometimes multiple ones in a single nucleus. Aniso-nucleosis was severe, and the chromatin patterns ranged from coarse to finely granular. The cytoplasm was narrow and lightly stained. Following fine needle aspiration, the patient underwent posterior exenteration on the basis of the cytologic diagnosis. CONCLUSION: Fine needle aspiration cytology was useful in establishing the preoperative diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the rectovaginal septum, and curative exenterative surgery could be then performed. To our knowledge, this is the first report of fine needle aspiration cytology of adenocarcinoma at this location.
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6/29. Metastatic brainstem tumor manifesting as hearing disturbance--case report.

    A 53-year-old male, who had undergone a left upper lung lobectomy for cancer 2 years previously, presented with metastatic brainstem tumor manifesting as hearing disturbance. At first an otorhinolaryngologist treated him for senile sensorineural hearing disturbance. However, he suffered gait ataxia and was referred to our department. On admission, neurological examination found mild cerebellar ataxia on the left and gait unsteadiness. Neurootological analysis revealed central-type sensorineural hearing disturbance on the left both in the pure tone audiogram and speech discrimination test. neuroimaging studies revealed a ring-like enhanced mass centered in the ventral left middle cerebellar peduncle, partly extending to the inferior cerebellar peduncle. Peritumoral edema extending to the ipsilateral cochlear nucleus was recognized. He underwent surgery via a left lateral suboccipital transcondylar approach. The histological diagnosis was adenocarcinoma identical with the primary lung cancer. Intra-axial brainstem metastatic lesion can be a cause of hearing disturbance, so should be included in the differential diagnosis for a patient complaining of hearing disturbance, especially with a past history of cancer.
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7/29. Signet ring basal cell carcinoma. A case study emphasizing the differential diagnosis of neoplasms with signet ring cell formation.

    Signet ring cells are cells in which the nucleus is crescentically compressed to the cellular border so that the cells look like signet rings. Due to the pluripotential nature of the basal cells of the epidermis, basal cell carcinoma displays many histopathological variants. We herein report the rare case of a middle-aged woman who had a basal cell carcinoma on the skin of the upper lip. The neoplasm was predominantly composed of cells with signet ring configuration. Histochemically, the latter were mucin-negative. immunohistochemistry demonstrated intracytoplasmic reactivity for cytokeratin MNF116 with strong staining intensity, as well as for smooth muscle actin. The signet ring tumor cells were S100 protein-negative and carcinoembryonic antigen-negative. The lack of ploidy abnormality as well as of molecular alterations in K-ras and p53 genes may explain in part the non-aggressive biological behavior of the present tumor. Because of potential diagnostic difficulties, the pathologist should be aware of this unusual form of basal cell carcinoma. A brief review of the literature on the differential diagnosis of signet ring cell cutaneous tumors is presented.
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8/29. Adenocarcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract with prominent rhabdoid features.

    rhabdoid tumor, first described in kidneys of infants and children, is an aggressive tumor that has been reported in several extrarenal locations. Gastrointestinal tumors with rhabdoid features are extremely rare. The effect of the rhabdoid phenotype on the aggressiveness of gastrointestinal tumors remains unclear. We present four cases of rhabdoid tumors of the gastrointestinal tract involving the esophagus, stomach, and small intestine and discuss the clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features. In the four cases reported herein, the patients' ages ranged from 52 to 73 years, and tumor size ranged from 3.8 to 13 cm in greatest dimension. The noncohesive rhabdoid cells exhibited an eccentric nucleus with a paranuclear inclusion, which was shown by electron microscopic examination to be composed of intermediate filaments. On immunohistochemical staining, the tumor cells were positive for vimentin and cytokeratin. Three patients developed distant metastasis shortly after diagnosis and died of disease within 2 to 10 months after initial presentation. A retrospective review of outcomes of the current cases and previously published literature showed that 12 (75%) of the 16 patients died within 6 months of presentation. Recognition of the rhabdoid phenotype in gastrointestinal tract neoplasms is important because this feature is associated with poor prognosis and unresponsiveness to conventional therapy.
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9/29. Eosinophil-tumor cell interaction in advanced gastric carcinoma: an electron microscopic approach.

    BACKGROUND: Tumor-associated tissue eosinophils have been observed in human tumors and experimental tumor models, but their function is poorly understood. MATERIALS AND methods: One case of intestinal-type adenocarcinoma of the stomach, mainly infiltrated by eosinophils, is studied by light and electron microscopy, focusing on the relationships between eosinophils and tumor cells and on the nature of tumor cell death. RESULTS: Using light microscopy, eosinophils, single or in clusters, were present both in the stroma and within neoplastic glands. With electron microscopy, tumor cells in intimate contact with eosinophils revealed changes consistent with autophagic cell death such as chromatin condensation in small masses into the nucleus, dilation of the nuclear envelope, and numerous cytoplasmic vacuoles. The adenocarcinoma cells, not contacted by neutrophils, remained morphologically well preserved. CONCLUSIONS: Our ultrastructural study suggests the hypothesis of a direct relationship between eosinophil infiltration and induction of autophagic cell death in gastric adenocarcinoma cells.
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10/29. Carcinoma of lung with rhabdoid features.

    lung tumors with rhabdoid features, included as variants of large cell carcinoma in the 1999 world health organization classification of lung tumors, are rare and have an aggressive clinical course. We report 11 patients with primary lung tumors with rhabdoid features and review the literature on this uncommon tumor. We examined samples from 7 primary (6 resections, 1 biopsy) and 4 metastatic tumor samples. All specimens were stained with immunohistochemical stains for pancytokeratin (CK), cytokeratin 7 (CK7), cytokeratin (CK20), thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1), and vimentin. The patients were 7 men and 4 women whose ages ranged from 35 to 70 years. Nine patients presented with respiratory symptoms, and 9 patients had a history of heavy smoking. One patient had TNM stage I tumor, 3 had stage III tumors, and 6 had stage IV tumors at presentation; tumor stage could not be determined in 1 patient. Histological examination of these tumors showed typical rhabdoid cells: large cells with abundant cytoplasm, a large eccentric nucleus with a central macronucleolus, and a rounded eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusion that sometimes caused nuclear indentation. These cells constituted 10% to 90% of the tumor. The "parent" neoplasm was sarcomatoid carcinoma and adenocarcinoma in 4 cases each and was large cell undifferentiated carcinoma in 3 cases. Cytoplasmic staining in the rhabdoid cells was seen in 9 of 11 cases for CK, in 4 of 10 cases for CK7, and in all 11 cases for vimentin. Nuclear staining for TTF-1 in the rhabdoid cells was absent in all 11 cases, and cytoplasmic staining for CK20 was negative in the rhabdoid cells in all 10 cases studied. Of the 9 patients with available follow-up information, 8 died of disease, and 1 is alive with no evidence of disease 20 months after the initial diagnosis. We conclude that rhabdoid features can occur in a variety of lung tumors, including sarcomatoid carcinoma. Recognizing these lesions is important because of their possibly aggressive clinical course.
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