The clinical records and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cell differential counts were analyzed in 96 patients at risk for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection to determine if this information may be prognostically useful and to identify possible mechanisms of BAL neutrophilia. In 60 patients with PCP, 15 fatalities or episodes of respiratory failure occurred, and 14 of these patients had greater than 5% BAL neutrophils. Only one of 33 patients with PCP and less than 5% BAL neutrophils died. In contrast, there was no correlation between survival and BAL neutrophil percentages in 33 patients who did not have PCP. Three patients with HIV infection without lung disease had normal BAL cell differentials. Intra-alveolar and interstitial leukocytes found in 17 transbronchial lung biopsies in patients with PCP indicate that the alveolar and interstitial compartments of the lung may be the source of BAL neutrophils. Pathologic evidence of increased severity of diffuse alveolar damage to explain BAL neutrophilia was not found. As BAL neutrophil percentages in PCP had both positive and negative predictive value, this information may be useful to stratify therapeutic trials or to identify the patient with PCP who is at high risk of a complicated or fatal outcome.
The clinical and pathologic features of 51 cases of pilomatrixoma found in our archives from 1990-1999 were reviewed, with emphasis on the cytopathologic features of the 22 cases that were sampled by fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy prior to excision. Although uncommon, almost 20% of the pilomatrixomas in this series occurred in adults over age 30. Of the commonly reported features, the presence of basaloid cells and ghost cells in FNA smears, associated with a cutaneous location of the lesion, was sufficient for a confident cytologic diagnosis of pilomatrixoma. The presence of foreign body-type giant cells, nucleated squamous cells, and calcification, alone or in combination, was less specific, but supported a diagnosis of pilomatrixoma. Although infrequently reported, prominent nucleoli in basaloid cells and smears containing refractile keratin clumps were very useful clues in the diagnosis of pilomatrixoma. Finally, the routine use of cell blocks is recommended because in many of the cases presented ghost cells were fragmented or obscured in smears, but were more readily identified in cell block sections.
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