An autopsy case of hypertrophic pachymeningitis and multiple cranial neuropathies is reported. A 53-year-old woman with paraplegia and various neurological signs which developed over a 2 year period was diagnosed as having an epidural mass with thickened dura mater extending from the lower cervical to the thoracic spinal cord. In addition, bilateral episcleritis, blephaloptosis, and blindness of the right eye with various cranial nerve deficits were found to be caused by the mass lesions involving the paranasal sinuses, orbit, and the cavernous sinus. Perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (p-ANCA) was positive, but cytoplasmic antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (c-ANCA) was negative by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The partially removed epidural mass with hypertrophied dura mater and biopsy of the paranasal lesions showed chronic granulomatous inflammation with vasculitis. The remaining lesions resolved with steroid therapy with remarkable neurological improvement. The positive p-ANCA test, paranasal involvement, the report of a similar histopathological case and a review of the literature on granulomatous pachymeningitis suggest the presence of p-ANCA-positive Wegener's granulomatosis with central nervous system involvement characterized by hypertrophic pachymeningitis and/or multiple cranial neuropathies.
Adult onset Leigh syndrome with a nucleotide (nt) 8993 mutation in mitochondrial (mt) DNA is reported. A 43-year-old woman with a 6-year-history of insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus developed muscular weakness, intractable nausea and vomiting, and anemia. These were followed vertigo, blindness, and deafness with nystagmus. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed abnormal high intensities in the bilateral medial regions of the thalamus and periaqueductal gray matters. Autopsy disclosed well-demarcated necrotizing lesions with prominent capillaries in the areas detected by MRI, which were sufficiently diagnostic for Leigh syndrome. MtDNA analysis performed on DNAs extracted from formalin-fixed tissues including liver, heart, brain, muscle, kidney and pancreas showed a T-->G mutation at nt 8993. This is the first case of adult Leigh syndrome demonstrating on mtDNA mutations.
We detected deposits of IgG, C3, and C9 (immune complexes) at the limb muscle motor end-plates (biceps brachii muscle) in 16 of 19 patients who exhibited only ocular signs and symptoms of myasthenia gravis that were improved by intravenous injections of edrophonium chloride. Circulating anti-acetylcholine receptor (anti-AChR) antibodies were negative in 6 of the 16 patients, but the motor end-plate fine structure in the postsynaptic regions was abnormal in all 16. Single-fiber EMG revealed no abnormalities in 8 of 13 patients studied. Our results indicate that the detection of immune complexes at the limb muscle end-plate provides a highly sensitive and confirmative method for diagnosing patients with minimal or atypical myasthenia gravis who have no detectable anti-AChR antibodies in their serum.
Background: In patients with Sézary syndrome undergoing extracorporeal photochemotherapy it is currently thought that photodamage of a congruent number of pathogenic circulating T cells is a necessary condition for a specific anticlonal response to be induced against these cells by the immune system. However other mechanisms of action, such as the induction of release by photoirradiated monocytes of some cytokines, are thought to cooperate in the induction of a therapeutic response. Objective: We investigated the effects of extracorporeal photochemotherapy on peripheral blood mononuclear cells in seven stage lb cutaneous T cell lymphoma patients. Method: Samples of peripheral blood were taken before starting extracoporeal photochemotherapy (baseline), and before the 3rd and 6th cycle of treatment, and then incubated with specific monoclonal antibodies. Results: The results showed a significant increase of CD8+ and CD36+ and a significant decrease of CD25+ in all the treated patients. Conclusion: Our results show that extracoporeal photochemotherapy is able to induce an increase of CD36+ cell in peripheral blood of patients with mycosis fungoides in its early stages. This subset of monocytes could be involved in the complex mechanism of action of extracoporeal photochemotherapy.
In recent years a novel problem has arisen in organ transplantation medicine, namely GVHD. The nervous system has been involved mainly at the level of the CNS and this can lead to a serious outcome for the patient. In rare cases, peripheral nerves may be affected and show acute or chronic polyneuropathy. Here a case is reported of polyneuropathy associated with chronic GVHD. A 32-year-old man, suffering from chronic GVHD following an allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for malignant lymphoma at the age of 25, developed a motor dominant polyneuropathy 5 years later. Electrophysiologic studies demonstrated the demyelinating type of polyneuropathy. Biopsy specimens from skin and skeletal muscle disclosed perivascular lymphocytic infiltrates expressing T-cell markers. The sural nerve showed a loss of myelinated nerve fibers with epineurial fibrosis and rare occurrence of T cells, but without obvious vasculitic changes. The present case suggested that polyneuropathy could develop in association with chronic GVHD in some patients with a long-standing disease course.
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.