Cases reported "Metaplasia"

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1/10. Stromal osseous metaplasia in metastatic adenocarcinoma of the gallbladder.

    A case of stromal osseous metaplasia in the abdominal scar metastasis of a gallbladder adenocarcinoma is described. The occurrence of stromal osseous metaplasia in carcinomas probably does not affect prognosis; however, it must be recognized to avoid a misdiagnosis of carcinosarcoma.
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2/10. Pyloric gland metaplasia with perineural invasion of the gallbladder: A lesion that can be confused with adenocarcinoma.

    BACKGROUND: Metaplastic pyloric glands have been described in a variety of organs including the gallbladder, in which they can extend into the muscular wall and serosa. methods: Clinical, histologic, and immunohistochemical features of four cases of gallbladder florid pyloric gland metaplasia with perineural and intraneural invasion are analyzed. RESULTS: The patients with pyloric gland metaplasia and perineural and intraneural invasion were all females ages 57-72 years. A preoperative diagnosis of chronic cholecystitis and cholelithiasis was made for all four patients, but a histologic diagnosis of adenocarcinoma was made for two patients and entertained in two others. Macroscopically the gallbladders showed changes usually associated with chronic cholecystitis. No intraluminal masses were observed in any of the gallbladders. The characteristic microscopic features included florid pyloric gland metaplasia, proliferation of medium-sized nerve trunks more prominent in the muscular layer and serosa, and perineural and intraneural invasion by the metaplastic glands lined by cytologically bland cuboidal or columnar mucin-containing cells. At last follow-up all patients were alive and symptom free 1-7 years after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. CONCLUSIONS: Pyloric gland metaplasia of the gallbladder should be added to the long and increasing list of benign epithelial proliferations that are associated with perineural and intraneural invasion. This lesion should not be mistaken for adenocarcinoma of the gallbladder, a misinterpretation that may have serious therapeutic implications. The pathogenesis of this phenomenon is unknown.
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3/10. Intestinal-type carcinoma of gallbladder. A histochemical and immunologic study.

    Two intestinal carcinomas of the gallbladder are presented. In both carcinomas the structure was papillary in superficial parts; the deeper ones also tended to an adenomatous structure. One of the tumors was bordered by a mucosa, with both intestinal- and antral-type metaplastic islands. The tumor was mainly a typical papilloma with malignant degeneration and infiltrative growth. The intestinal structure was morphologically clear in the papillary area of both carcinomas, but not distinct in the invasive part of the tumor. In both tumors, goblet cells and columnar cells with a distinct brush border were noted. Histochemical and immunologic methods were used in the identification of the glycoproteins of the tumor cells. With both methods the intestinal character of the tumor could be shown. A positive fluorescence was achieved with an intestinal antiserum in well-differentiated tumorous areas containing goblet cells, as well as in the intestinal metaplastic areas. In the same areas the gallbladder-specific antigen was negative. The antiserum isolated from the normal gastric mucosa and corresponding to neutral glycoprotein gave a positive fluorescence only in the nontumorous metaplastic gastric superficial-type epithelium and in the metaplastic antral-type glands.
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keywords = gallbladder
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4/10. Intestinal type cholangiocarcinoma of intrahepatic large bile duct associated with hepatolithiasis--a new histologic subtype for further investigation.

    Intestinal metaplasia is regarded as a possible predisposing factor of cancer, particularly of the intestinal type adenocarcinoma. The clinicopathologic features of intestinal type adenocarcinoma have been well documented in the stomach, and intestinal metaplasia and intestinal type adenocarcinoma has also been reported in the gallbladder. However, regarding the intrahepatic bile ducts, the clinicopathologic features are not yet clear and there have been no reports in English literature on intestinal type intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. We report a case of intestinal type cholangiocarcinoma associated with hepatolithiasis in the large intrahepatic bile duct. The tumor showed mainly intraductal papillary growth primarily composed of absorptive columnar cells. Particularly, Paneth cell metaplasia of carcinoma cells was widespread, and goblet cells and neuroendocrine cells were also observed in the carcinoma tissue, to a varied degree. It showed an intraluminal spread along the dilated intrahepatic ducts with minimal ductal stromal invasion. In the vicinity of the tumor, intestinal metaplasia was also identified in the adjacent hyperplastic and dysplastic bile duct epithelium. Some bile ducts contained stones and the mural glands of the bile ducts showed hyperplastic change secondary to stones. This case is considered to provide the evidence supporting the concept of the metaplasia-dysplasia-carcinoma sequence via intestinal metaplasia in the stone-containing intrahepatic bile ducts.
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keywords = gallbladder
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5/10. Chronic cholecystitis with bone metaplasia. A case report.

    Bone metaplasia is a rare phenomenon in the gastrointestinal tract. We present a case of a 58-year-old man who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy for symptoms of chronic cholecystitis. Histologic examination of the removed gallbladder revealed intramural bone metaplasia in association with chronic cholecystitis. To the best of our knowledge, such a case has not yet been reported. The clinical significance of this finding remains to be elucidated.
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6/10. A pseudoepidermoid cyst arising from exuberant squamous metaplasia of the gallbladder.

    Squamous lesions of the gallbladder are uncommon. We report a case of a pseudoepidermoid cyst in a middle-aged woman arising on a background of chronic cholecystitis and cholelithiasis, which induced exuberant squamous metaplasia of the entire gallbladder mucosa, clinically mimicking a gallbladder tumor. To our knowledge, this is the first such reported case in the English literature.
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ranking = 1.4
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7/10. Tubular adenoma of the gallbladder with squamoid spindle cell metaplasia. Report of three cases with immunohistochemical study.

    Three cases of tubular adenoma of the gallbladder with squamoid spindle cell metaplasia are reported. Two of the three patients, who were middle-aged Japanese, had a solitary polyp in the gallbladder, and the other had three polyps. All the lesions were detected incidentally by ultrasonography. The polyps were pedunculated with a fine or frail stalk, and ranged from 0.5 to 3.9 cm in diameter. Histologically, they were tubular adenomas accompanied by scattered foci composed of a compact collection of short-spindle or oval cells with mild atypia. These cells did not retain intercellular bridges, and lacked intracellular keratinization. Immunohistochemically, the spindle cells stained positively for high-molecular-weight cytokeratin (EAB 903, a marker of squamous cell differentiation), whereas adenoma cells lining the tubules were negative for this antigen. Therefore, the spindle cell component is considered to represent squamoid metaplasia of adenoma cells.
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keywords = gallbladder
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8/10. Squamous cell carcinoma of the gallbladder associated with squamous metaplasia and adenocarcinoma in situ of the mucosal columnar epithelium.

    A case of well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the gallbladder is presented. Unlike most previously reported cases, the tumor developed in association with squamous metaplasia as well as dysplastic and in situ adenocarcinomatous changes of the gallbladder epithelium. The significance of these lesions is discussed in relation to the histogenesis of squamous cell carcinoma or adenosquamous carcinoma of this organ.
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9/10. Significance of intestinal metaplasia for the evolution of cancer in the biliary tract.

    Of 25 cases of cancer in the intrahepatic bile ducts, 44 cases of cancer in the extrahepatic bile ducts, 30 cases of adenoma in the gallbladder, and 100 cases of infiltrating carcinoma in the gallbladder, several to about 20% of the cases showed Paneth's cell metaplasia and/or enterochromaffin cell metaplasia within the tumor mass or in its surrounding mucosa. These metaplasia were not found in small adenomata of the gallbladder, but they were frequently seen in large adenomata. Goblet cell metaplasia and marked hyperplasia of mucous glands were seen more frequently in the mucosa surrounding cancer than in the mucosa of 500 non-neoplastic gallbladders. Although cancer in the gallbladder occasionally developed on the basis of intestinal metaplasia alone, intestinal metaplasia was not likely to be related to induction of most adenomata, but it was likely to be associated with growth and cancerous change of adenoma.
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10/10. Pyloric gland type adenoma of the gallbladder with squamoid spindle cell metaplasia.

    This study documents a pyloric gland type adenoma of the gallbladder with prominent spindle cell metaplasia arising in a 61 year-old woman. A pedunculated polyp, 1.5 x 1.0 x 1.0 cm, was histologically diagnosed as a tubular adenoma. Most glandular structures showed positivity for a monoclonal antibody M2 (2B5) which indicates a differentiation to pylotic gland type. The spindle cell component displayed no apparent epithelial structures but stained mostly positive for pancytokeratin and cytokeratin (CK) 18, and focally for CK 5 6, CKs 7 and 19, whereas CKs 8, 13, 20, and non-epithelial markers could not be demonstrated. This suggests that the spindle cells were immature epithelial cells differentiating towards squamous and/or glandular cells. Even in spindle cell areas, the nuclear atypia was mild, and proliferating cells positive for MIB-1 (Ki-67) antigen were infrequently seen. This unique phenomenon, of which only three cases have been previously reported, is considered to represent benign squamoid spindle cell metaplasia.
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