A case of a fibrovascular polyp of the sigmoid colon is reported. The patient tested positively for fecal occult blood on a mass survey for colorectal cancer, and underwent colonoscopic examination which revealed a pedunculated submucosal tumor in the sigmoid colon. The tumor, about 10 mm in diameter, had a short thin stalk and was removed endoscopically; the histological diagnosis was fibrovascular polyp. This extremely rare polyp is discussed, and particular attention is focused on the unusual endoscopic features and on the appropriate management.
A 45 year old patient with Down's syndrome was autopsied. The brain, weighing 800 g, was small in size, and serial sections revealed generalized gyral atrophy and ventricular dilatation. In the gray matter, there was diffuse neuronal degeneration characterized by numerous neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), senile plaques and frequent amyloid angiopathy. Histochemical and electron microscopical analyses of these lesions showed no qualitative difference from those in Alzheimer's disease. A topographical study of NFTs showed that they were numerous in the limbic system and cerebral neocortex. Various numbers of NFTs were seen in the olfactory bulb, thalamus, medial geniculate body, innominate substance, putamen, caudate, pallidum, central gray, reticular formation, certain midline nuclei of the brainstem, substantia nigra, red nucleus and dorsal vagal nucleus. This distribution pattern was not different qualitatively from that in Alzheimer's disease, and such a similarity was especially evident in the olfactory bulb, where many tufted and mitral cells as well as anterior olfactory nucleus cells showed NFTs. These common features of brain pathology in Down's syndrome and Alzheimer's disease may be due to a specific gene defect in both diseases. Acta Pathol Jpn 40: 735 743, 1990.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.