Cases reported "Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2"

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1/13. Spindle cell carcinoma of the pancreas: a case report.

    We report on a resected case of spindle cell carcinoma of the pancreas in a 73 year-old Japanese male who has a history of diabetes mellitus. The patient visited his neighborhood hospital complaining of abdominal pain and was referred to our hospital for further examination of a pancreatic tumor discovered by abdominal ultrasonography. Upon the diagnosis of ductal carcinoma, a distal pancreatectomy with splenectomy was performed. Microscopically, the tumor was composed of spindle cells arranged in interlacing bundles with frequent mitotic figures. The diagnosis of spindle cell carcinoma of the pancreas was confirmed by immunohistochemical studies. To our knowledge, our case is the first resected case of spindle cell carcinoma arising from the pancreas in the English literature.
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keywords = ductal
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2/13. Asymptomatic acute pancreatitis due to tamoxifen-induced severe hypertriglyceridemia in a patient with diabetes mellitus and breast cancer.

    We report tamoxifen-induced hypertriglyceridemia and asymptomatic acute pancreatitis in a 51 year-old women with type 2 diabetes mellitus and stage III-b infiltrative ductal carcinoma, admitted to the hospital with weakness, oliguria and glucose dysregulation. On admission, there was no fever, abdominal or back pain, rebound tenderness, nausea, or vomiting. Following 1 year of tamoxifen treatment, triglycerides increased from 400 to 1344 mg/dl (blood urea nitrogen 52 mg/dl, creatinine 2.0 mg/dl, glucose 341 mg/dl). hypertriglyceridemia was considered to be due to either diabetic dyslipidemia and/or tamoxifen. On computerized tomography, pancreatic enlargement, heterogenity, hypodensity and a pancreatic pseudocyst (5 x 7.5 cm diameter) were found. Acute pancreatitis was suspected, and serum amylase level was found to be increased (273 IU/L). tamoxifen was discontinued and gemfibrozil was started. triglycerides decreased to 301 mg/dl and amylase decreased to 66 IU/L a week later and remained normal thereafter. This case indicates that tamoxifen-induced hypertriglyceridemia may cause acute pancreatitis without classical symptoms which might be due to autonomic neuropathy in diabetic patients. Effects on lipid metabolism should be considered and triglycerides should be closely followed in patients on tamoxifen.
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ranking = 1
keywords = ductal
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3/13. Treatment of parotid ductal stenosis and concomitant resolution of autonomic symptomatology.

    Salivary retention and recurrent sialadenitis as a result of ductal stenosis is an uncommon condition that presents difficult management problems. Ductal dilation with small angioplasty balloons is recognized to be of low morbidity and can eliminate the possible need for surgical intervention. This case report is interesting in that the successful treatment of parotid duct stenosis was accompanied by the resolution of a spectrum of autonomic symptoms that had seriously compromised the patient's quality of life.
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ranking = 5
keywords = ductal
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4/13. Endometrial adenocarcinoma without prior hormone replacement in a diabetic patient with gonadal dysgenesis.

    patients with dysgenetic gonads and turner syndrome are unlikely to develop endometrial carcinoma unless they have received unopposed estrogen replacement therapy. This case describes a 54-year-old woman with turner syndrome and primary amenorrhea who developed adenocarcinoma of the endometrium without having received hormone replacement. Vaginal bleeding, a pelvic mass, and sepsis were the presenting symptoms. The patient also had diabetes mellitus and hypothyroidism. Polyglandular endocrine patterns are known to occur with a high frequency in these patients. The woman's chromosome studies revealed a modified 46,X,i(Xq) (isochromosome X). This is the first report of an isochromosome X patient to develop endometrial cancer without receiving estrogen replacement. The etiology of this rare case may be an increased propensity for patients with X-chromosome deletions to develop neoplasms in general, or extragonadal estrogen production.
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ranking = 0.29139032896597
keywords = neoplasm
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5/13. Diabetic mastopathy in type II diabetes mellitus.

    Diabetic mastopathy can mimic cancer. We report 2 cases of diabetic mastopathy in patients with long-standing type II diabetes. One was insulin-dependent, and the other had never been treated with insulin. These 2 patients had classical acoustical shadow on ultrasonograms. breast core biopsies showed constellations of morphological features resembling diabetic mastopathy, including sclerotic changes of the fibrous stroma with keloid-like collagen fibers, few epithelioid fibroblasts, perivascular and interlobular mononuclear cell infiltrates, and focal atrophic changes of the ductal-lobular units. Both patients were free of malignancy at 3 and 4 years of follow-up, respectively. There are limited data on diabetic mastopathy in insulin-naive type II diabetes mellitus patients. Better awareness of this entity and its sonographic features may allow more patients to be spared from excisional biopsy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = ductal
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6/13. Intraabdominal haemangiopericytoma associated with uncontrolled diabetes mellitus.

    Haemangiopericytoma (HPC) is a rare tumour with a predilection for the central nervous system. Though previously thought to originate from the meninges and ventricular walls, HPC's are currently accepted as distinct mesenchymal neoplasms unrelated to meningiomas. Haemangiopericytomas have been previously reported to be associated with the production of insulin like growth factor II (IGF-II) and hypoglycaemia. A case of a 61-year-old poorly controlled diabetic lady with a rare presentation of an abdominal haemangiopericytoma is discussed. A laparoscopic assisted resection of the massive lobulated tumour arising from the parietal peritoneum with dense attachment to the diaphragm and the liver was performed with an uncomplicated postoperative recovery. Control of the patient's diabetes improved dramatically following surgery and the rare association of hyperglycaemia and HPC, which has not been previously described, is elaborated upon in this report.
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ranking = 0.29139032896597
keywords = neoplasm
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7/13. Gastric stromal tumor.

    Gastric stromal tumors are rare neoplasms of the stomach. In this report we present a gastric stromal tumor with an exophytic growth pattern, and describe magnetic resonance imaging and endoscopic ultrasonography findings.
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ranking = 0.29139032896597
keywords = neoplasm
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8/13. Dorsal pancreatectomy: an embryology-based resection.

    In a 45-year-old man with acute pancreatitis and recent onset of diabetes mellitus, intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) associated with pancreas divisum was found. There were no arguments for an invasive component in the IPMN lesions, which seemed to involve nearly all the dorsal pancreas. Resection of only the dorsal pancreas was performed with division of the pancreas at the internal side of the duodenum and at the anterior edge of the common bile duct. The gastroduodenal artery was preserved resulting in good vascularization of both common bile duct and proximal duodenum. Postoperative course was marked by a transient pancreatic fistula. Definitive pathological examination revealed noninvasive IPMN involving several branch ducts and partially the cephalic dorsal duct, with an 8 mm tumor-free segment from the transection level. Twelve months after resection, the patient had normal gastrointestinal function with neither clinical exocrine insufficiency nor uncontrolled diabetes. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging revealed no signs of recurrence in the ventral pancreas. In patients with pancreas divisum, dorsal pancreatectomy can be proposed for noninvasive IPMN involving only the dorsal pancreas to avoid drawbacks of total duodenopancreatic resection.
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ranking = 1.291390328966
keywords = ductal, neoplasm
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9/13. Diabetic (lymphocytic) mastopathy with exuberant lymphohistiocytic and granulomatous response: a case report with review of the literature.

    We report a case of a 66-year-old woman who presented with multiple painless masses in both breasts. Prior bilateral biopsies were diagnosed as Rosai-Dorfman disease (Sinus histiocytosis with Massive Lymphadenopathy). A recent lumpectomy specimen revealed a gray-white smooth cut surface with a discrete masslike lesion. The histopathology demonstrated a fibrotic breast parenchyma with foci of dense fibrosis and scattered inconspicuous breast epithelium surrounded by lymphocytes that formed aggregates and follicles with germinal centers. The inflammation was in a periductal, perilobular, and perivascular distribution. In addition, an exuberant inflammatory response with histiocytes and fibroblasts was present. This inflammatory response focally surrounded areas of fat necrosis and formed noncaseating granulomas with rare multinucleated giant cells. This process had infiltrative, ill-defined edges and involved the subcutaneous tissues. The overlying epidermis was normal. The final diagnosis was diabetic mastopathy with an exuberant lymphohistiocytic response. The differential diagnosis included Rosai-Dorfman disease, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor, granulomatous mastitis, sclerosing lipogranulomatous response/sclerosing lipogranuloma, lupus panniculitis, and rheumatoid nodules. Immunohistochemical studies and flow cytometry confirmed the polyclonal nature of the lymphoid infiltrate. After the histologic evaluation, we inquired if the patient had a history of diabetes mellitus, and learned that she did have type 2 noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. In conclusion, we report a case of diabetic mastopathy that presents with bilateral tumorlike masses and an unusual exuberant lymphohistiocytic response with granuloma formation. The pathologist may not be provided with a history of diabetes mellitus, but the characteristic fibrosis, lymphocytic ductitis/lobulitis, and sclerosing lobulitis with perilobular and perivascular lymphocytic infiltrates should provide clues for an accurate diagnosis, even when an exuberant and an unusual lymphohistiocytic response is present. A timely accurate diagnosis can help limit repeat surgeries in this vulnerable group of patients.
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ranking = 1
keywords = ductal
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10/13. adenocarcinoma and concomitant intraductal papillary adenoma in the pancreas.

    A 72-year-old man was found to have a 12 mm solid lesion in the pancreatic tail and an 8 mm cystic lesion in the body of the pancreas by computed tomography carried out during a routine follow-up study of his adult-onset diabetes mellitus. A distal pancreatectomy was performed revealing the pancreas to have an adenocarcinoma in the tail and a conglomeration of intraductal papillary adenoma in the body. A review of the literature disclosed similar coexistences of cystadenoma and carcinoma in four patients, none of which was documented with preoperative imaging features such as we had.
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ranking = 5
keywords = ductal
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