Cases reported "Adenoma"

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1/400. Multiple canalicular adenomas: a case report and review of the literature.

    The canalicular adenoma is an uncommon, benign salivary gland tumor that most frequently occurs in the upper lip. Rarely, it manifests itself clinically and histologically as a multifocal lesion, a feature not generally seen with other intraoral salivary gland tumors. Here we report a case of canalicular adenoma that manifested itself with 13 clinically discrete tumor masses involving the upper lip and anterior buccal mucosa. In addition to the clinical nodules, there were microscopic foci of tumor cells in the adjacent normal-appearing salivary gland tissue surrounding the tumors. This article also reviews previously reported multifocal canalicular adenomas and discusses their features, emphasizing differences in the reported growth patterns of this unusual tumor.
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2/400. Metanephric adenoma-like tumors of the kidney: report of 3 malignancies with emphasis on discriminating features.

    BACKGROUND: Metanephric adenoma is a very rare benign renal tumor; only 80 well-documented cases have been reported to date. We have seen several renal tumors that were originally incorrectly diagnosed as metanephric adenoma. DESIGN: We present 3 unusual renal tumors (2 primary and 1 metastatic), each of which illustrates important pathologic features useful in discriminating metanephric adenoma from malignant mimics. RESULTS: Case 1 involved a 46-year-old man with multiple small, cortical, solid, papillary (chromophil) renal cell carcinomas in his right kidney; the patient developed multiple, histologically identical, solid, papillary (chromophil) carcinomas in the opposite kidney 17 months later. Case 2 involved a 32-year-old woman with a 14-cm right renal tumor who developed soft tissue and bone metastases over a 17-year period. Case 3 involved a 52-year-old woman who presented with a 1.8-cm corticomedullary renal nodule, which eventually proved to represent a metastasis from a poorly differentiated (insular) carcinoma of the thyroid. All 3 tumors superficially resembled metanephric adenoma and consisted of primitive, dark-staining cells arranged in tubules or sheets. Each tumor, however, also had features inconsistent with the diagnosis of metanephric adenoma, including multifocal lesions with a variable nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio and diffuse cytokeratin 7 and epithelial membrane antigen immunopositivity in case 1, a 14-cm-diameter tumor with occasional mitoses in case 2, and a distinct fibrous capsule with capsular and vascular invasion in case 3. In addition, all 3 tumors lacked the cytologic features of bland overlapping nuclei with imperceptible cytoplasm consistently seen in metanephric adenoma. CONCLUSION: Adherence to strict histopathologic criteria will discourage misdiagnosis of a malignant or potentially malignant renal neoplasm as the rare and always benign metanephric adenoma.
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keywords = membrane
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3/400. Renal adenomatosis associated with carcinoma of the lower urinary tract: a case report with immunohistochemical study.

    A case of renal adenomatosis of the left kidney associated with a carcinoma of the ipsilateral ureter in a 49-year-old man is examined. One hundred and eight adenomas, which were smaller than 15 mm in diameter, and a single microcarcinoma, which measured 1 mm in diameter, were found in the kidney. Further, there were more than 800 hyperplastic lesions which could be classified into three groups: (i) 792 of distal origin; (ii) 24 of proximal origin; and 10 of collecting duct origin. The serial sections obtained from 19 paraffin blocks were stained using Leu M1 as the proximal marker and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) as the distal/collecting marker to assist in determining the origins. Ten of the small adenomas (15 lesions), which did not exceed 3 mm in diameter, were predominantly positive for EMA and five were predominantly positive for Leu M1. Further, hyperplastic lesions of distal and collecting duct origins were diffusely positive for EMA and sporadically positive for Leu M1. The lesions of proximal origin were predominantly positive for Leu M1 and sporadically positive for EMA. These findings suggest that a progression from hyperplasia and a direct transition from a single tubule to adenoma occurred multifocally in different segments of the nephrons throughout the left kidney.
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4/400. Clinical and morphological features of undifferentiated monomorphous GH/TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma.

    A 41-year-old male presented with progressive visual defects, acromegaly and hyperthyroidism. After clinical evaluation a giant GH/TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma was diagnosed. Administration of the somatostatin analog octreotide at doses of 150 microg s.c. per day inhibited the secretion of both GH and TSH. A three-week treatment with octreotide prior to surgery led to slight visual improvement and CT scan showed some new necrotic areas within the tumor mass. Transcranial surgery was performed. By immunohistochemical analyses of the adenoma tissue GH, prolactin and beta-chorionic gonadotropin were detected; TSH was negative. Electron microscopy revealed an undifferentiated, monomorphous adenoma with morphological features of an acidophil stem cell adenoma such as the presence of misplaced exocytoses, fibrous bodies and mitochondrial gigantism. However, the tumor cells contained small secretory granules (up to 250 nm) accumulated along the cell membrane characteristic of thyrotrope cells. Furthermore, some adenoma cells were fusiform with long cytoplasmic processes resembling thyrotropes. Two months after the operation CT scan revealed a large residual tumor. serum GH and TSH levels had increased again and the TSH level was even higher than before the treatment. The patient died suddenly, most probably of lethal arrhythmia. Specimens of the adenoma tissue obtained at autopsy confirmed the previous findings with the exception of positive immunostaining for TSH which was found in less than 1% of the adenoma cells. This undifferentiated, monomorphous GH/TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma represents an entity that is unusual both in its ultrastructural features and clinical manifestations suggesting a cytogenesis from an early, undifferentiated stem cell.
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5/400. hypertension and virilization caused by a unique desoxycorticosterone- and androgen-secreting adrenal adenoma.

    We describe a rare androgen and desoxycorticosterone (DOC)-secreting adrenal tumor in a non-Cushingoid 14 year-old Haitian girl with secondary amenorrhea, hypertension and virilization. Her steroid pattern simulated an 11 beta-hydroxylation defect with notable elevation of adrenal androgens, 11-desoxycortisol (S), DOC, 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone and pregnenelone. Exogenous ACTH stimulated steroidogenesis. A CAT scan unfortunately failed to delineate an adrenal mass. dexamethasone (DEX) was administered, therefore, which partially suppressed androgen levels, reduced DOC and S by 80% and 82% respectively, and normalized blood pressure. Nevertheless, the response to glucocorticoid was incomplete and an MRI was obtained, which revealed a right adrenal tumor. Post surgery, the patient promptly resumed menses and became normotensive. This case illustrates that ACTH and DEX cannot reliably differentiate tumor from hyperplasia, whereas the simultaneous increase of delta 4 and delta 5 steroids, present here, may favor a tumor. This case also allows speculation that the hypersecretion of DOC may result from inhibition of 11 beta-hydroxylase activity by excess androgens. The importance of appropriate imaging for diagnosis is underscored.
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ranking = 0.58625558576866
keywords = propria
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6/400. Inappropriate elevation of intact PTH in the presence of normocalcemia after successful surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism.

    We describe here a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism who had high serum intact PTH levels for over 16 months after parathyroidectomy without signs of recurrence or persistence of the disease. The patient was a 48-year-old female who appeared well nourished (body mass index, 23.7). She was received subtotal gastrectomy as treatment for a duodenal ulcer at 44 years and 5 months old and had reached menopaused at 46 years of age. hypercalcemia and a high serum intact PTH level were pointed out three months before admission to our institute. A bone densitometric study revealed that the bone mass of the lumbar spine was extremely reduced (0.636 g/cm2, Z score, -2.17) preoperatively and had not increased 29.5 months after parathyroidal adenomectomy (0.656 g/cm2, Z score, -1.97). hyperparathyroidism, menopause and gastrectomy may have together contributed to the reduced bone mass. The postoperative persistently increased PTH levels in our patient suggest that the remaining parathyroid glands could have been altered during hypercalcemia, causing an increase in the set-point of PTH secretion by serum calcium or a decrease in the renal responsiveness to PTH during the disease.
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ranking = 2.3450223430746
keywords = propria
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7/400. Neuromyotonia of the abducens nerve after hypophysectomy and radiation.

    The clinical signs of the rarely encountered ocular neuromyotonia consist of transient involuntary tonic contraction and delayed relaxation of single or multiple extraocular muscles, resulting in episodic diplopia. With a mean time delay of 3.5 years, this motility disorder frequently follows tumor excision or adjuvant radiation near the skull base. Ocular neuromyotonia may reflect inappropriate discharge from oculomotor neurons with unstable cell membranes because of segmental demyelinization by tumor compression and radiation-induced microangiopathy. In the present paper, the authors present the case of a 53-year-old patient with a history of transsphenoidal hypophysectomy and adjuvant radiotherapy, who underwent strabismus surgery for abducens palsy.
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ranking = 0.68081522983885
keywords = propria, membrane
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8/400. aldosterone-producing adenoma without hypertension: a report of two cases.

    Normotensive primary hyperaldosteronism is exceedingly rare. We report two new cases of this syndrome in two middle-aged women, one of Asian origin. The presenting signs were tetany in one case and an adrenal mass in the other. Neither patient had hypertension, despite repeated measurements with a manual armlet. A typical biological profile of primary hyperaldosteronism was demonstrated in both patients, including hypokalemia with inappropriate kaliuresis, elevated resting plasma aldosterone, and undetectable plasma renin activity. The circadian rhythm of blood pressure was studied by ambulatory monitoring pre- and post-operatively. It confirmed the lack of hypertension, but the circadian rhythm of blood pressure was lost before surgery in one patient. Surgical removal of the histologically typical aldosterone-producing adenomas normalized the kalemia. The main finding in these two patients was spontaneously low blood pressure in the post-operative period. This suggests that excess aldosterone induced relative hypertension in these patients whose blood pressure was spontaneously very low. Genetic screening for dexamethasone-sensitive hyperaldosteronism was negative in both patients.
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keywords = propria
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9/400. Cyclical Cushing's syndrome--a trap for the unwary.

    A woman with cyclical Cushing's syndrome due to periodic hormonogenesis from a corticotropin (ACTH) secreting pituitary adenoma is discussed. This patient presented with acute steroid-induced psychosis but she was found to have subtle cushingoid features that went undetected for two years. Laboratory evaluation for Cushing's syndrome showed incongruous results due to periodic ACTH production by the tumour. Cyclical Cushing's syndrome may be an under-recognised phenomenon and incorrect interpretation of investigative results may lead to wrong tumour localisation and inappropriate surgery. This case highlights the subtleties and complexities that one may encounter in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with Cushing's syndrome, and emphasises that the laboratory results must always be interpreted in the appropriate clinical context.
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ranking = 1.1725111715373
keywords = propria
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10/400. 'Pyloric gland-type adenoma' arising in heterotopic gastric mucosa of the duodenum, with dysplastic progression of the gastric type.

    'Pyloric gland-type adenoma' is a recently described and very rare entity. We report a case of a pedunculated polyp of the duodenal bulb showing the features of pyloric gland-type adenoma. Heterotopic gastric mucosa was found adjacent to the tumour. Immunohistochemically, the tumour cells at the surface of the polyp showed foveolar-type mucin (M1) while most other tumour cells showed deep gastric mucin (M2), displaying a pattern of differentiation similar to the normal gastric mucosa. The polyp also showed villous or papillary structures with disorganization of gastric differentiation and marked increase of proliferating in foci cells. This is the first case of pyloric gland-type adenoma found to arise in heterotopic gastric mucosa of the duodenum, showing dysplastic progression of the gastric type.
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keywords = mucosa
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