Among 582 fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsies of major and minor salivary glands performed between 1974 and 1990, lack of cytological histologic correlation was noted in 21 cases. Of these, the cause in 10 FNAs was inadequate cytological sampling of the lesion. [One case of malignant hemangiopericytoma was tentatively diagnosed as a monomorphic adenoma on FNA, a polymorphic T-cell lymphoma was diagnosed as granulomatous inflammation on aspiration biopsy, a benign lymphoepithelial lesion was diagnosed as a reactive lymph node, a branchial cleft cyst was called benign mixed tumor (BMT), one case of chronic sialoadenitis was called BMT by FNA, two cases of benign lymphoepithelial lesion (BLEL) were diagnosed as cystic Warthin's tumor, two low-grade mucoepidermoid carcinomas were called BMT, and a BMT was cytologically diagnosed as a Warthin's tumor with squamous metaplasia versus low-grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma. One case of low-grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma was diagnosed only as a "cyst."] Review of these cases identifies constant features that permit differentiation between Warthin's tumor and BLEL, and among BMT, mucoepidermoid carcinoma, and chronic sialoadenitis. Despite a few problem cases, FNA of the salivary gland is accurate in the preoperative diagnosis and classification of salivary gland neoplasms.
The article describes a case of gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumor, which is histogenetically related to the gastrointestinal autonomic plexus (hence the name plexosarcoma). This rare and only recently recognized tumor of the gastrointestinal tract appears to have significant prognostic implications. This tumor cannot be diagnosed unequivocally by light microscopic and immunocytochemical examinations but shows characteristic electron microscopic features. The present case occurred as a gastric primary tumor and exhibited a light and electron microscopic picture similar to the one described in previous reports: areas of spindle-shaped and epithelioid cells, cytoplasmic processes with dense-core granules, and cytoplasmic intermediate filaments. Ultrastructural characteristics diagnostic of other gastrointestinal tumors, such as those originating from smooth muscle, Schwann cell, or endocrine cell types, were absent. Immunocytochemically, the tumor was diffusely positive for vimentin and neuron-specific enolase and focally positive for neurofilament triplet protein (NFTP) 160. Negative staining was observed for NFTP 200, S-100 protein, desmin, somatostatin, chromogranin, keratins (AE1/AE3), and glial fibrillary acidic protein. Although gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumor has been reported to have a deceptively low-grade malignant appearance by light microscopy, it follows an aggressive clinical course. This tumor showed a much higher mitotic rate (one mitosis per high-power field) than the rates of tumors reported previously. Moreover, it occurred in a much younger patient (20 years of age) compared to previously reported cases (45 to 66 years of age), with the exception of one other case (16 years of age).
A previously healthy 20-mo-old infant presented with a right leg limp and was discovered to have a palpable intra-abdominal mass. Radiographic studies showed the mass arising from the right psoas muscle. Preoperative clinical diagnosis was probable sarcoma. Percutaneous fine-needle aspiration biopsy of the mass was interpreted as a sarcoma based on the abundant cellularity of spindled shaped mesenchymal cells. Exploratory laparotomy showed the mass to be unresectable. Histologic and ultrastructural examination of biopsy fragments, however, revealed an inflammatory myofibroblastic pseudotumor. Radiographic follow-up showed a gradual disappearance of the mass. The infant was clinically well at a clinic visit one year following surgery. This case serves to illustrate the aspiration cytology of an uncommon benign tumor-like proliferation that, when located in an unusual anatomic site, has the potential to mislead the cytopathologist into a malignant interpretation.
A case of unsuspected classical aortitis with "tree-barking" of the ascending aorta in a young woman with systemic lupus erythematosus and inconclusive syphilitic serologic results is presented. At autopsy, no definite diagnostic clues as to syphilitic or lupic aortitis could be obtained. Although infrequent today, the possibility of complicated cardiovascular syphilis still should be considered. Involvement of the ascending aorta by other systemic diseases is well known and can imitate syphilitic aortitis. Although the possibility of two concomitant diseases cannot be ruled out, the young age of the patient, the weak syphilitic serologic result, and active systemic lupus erythematosus demonstrated in other organs favor a diagnosis of lupic aortitis of the ascending aorta.
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