Circulating thyroglobulin and antithyroglobulin antibodies were assayed in fifteen patients affected by solitary "cold" nodules of the thyroid who had undergone fine needle aspiration for cytologic diagnosis. The aim of the study was to investigate whether a minor insult to thyroid tissue such as fine needle aspiration is able to release thyroglobulin into the circulation and to induce the formation of antithyroglobulin antibodies. The results obtained are as follows: 1. Circulating thyroglobulin increased substantially after fine needle aspiration in 11 out of 15 patients. 2. Antithyroglobulin antibodies did not appear in any patient during a follow-up period of two months. 3. The magnitude of basal thyroglobulin and thyroglobulin increase after needle aspiration were unrelated to cytologic diagnosis.
Substance P (SP) is considered a primary sensory transmitter and is widely distributed within the autonomic nervous system. This study is concerned with the distribution of SP-like immunoreactive nerve fibers in the human larynx. Individual SP-like immunoreactive nerve fibers were detected in the subepithelial connective tissue of the laryngeal mucosa, in the ventricular and subglottic glandular regions and in a few nervous ganglia in the deep connective tissue. No intraepithelial SP-like immunoreactive fibers were present in our material.
A case of double bronchial typical carcinoid of the central type, with a nodal metastasis and paraneoplastic Cushing syndrome is reported. The case is remarkable because both the primary tumors and nodal metastasis were composed of a double cell population: one was arranged in nests, was argyrophilic, immunostained with PHE-5 monoclonal antibody, and contained neurosecretory granules; the other one was neither argyrophilic nor PHE-5-immunoreactive, but was strongly immunoreactive for S-100 protein, had a stellate morphology and was at the periphery of the nests of the other cells. The S-100 immunoreactive cells were regarded as a sort of "sustentacular" or "satellite" cells, which are themselves neoplastic. Bronchial carcinoids with S-100 positive cells, although strictly related with other bronchial carcinoids, may in fact represent a group of tumors with different histogenesis and/or differentiative pattern. More work should be done to elucidate whether there is any relevant clinical difference between bronchial carcinoids with or without S-100 reactive cells.
Sixty skin biopsies of fifty-eight non-treated patients with cutaneous leishmaniasis from Nicaragua were studied. Biopsies were classified according to Ridley's histopathologic groups: 36 (60%) were included in group B (diffuse necrosis), 14 in group C (focal necrosis), 7 (11.6%) in group D (reactive tuberculoid). Only three biopsies remained unclassified. None of our cases could be included in groups A and E. Immunohistochemistry disclosed in 17 cases Russel's bodies secreting IgM and only one IgG positive. There was no correlation between the histopathologic groups and the presence of Russel's bodies. However, we believe the presence of Russel's bodies help the diagnosis of leishmaniasis. Correlation between morphological patterns and the different leishmania species was also considered.
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