The nude (congenitally athymic) mouse, C3H/HeN is highly susceptible to infection with Brugia pahangi (Nematoda: Filarioidea). Normal, hairy mice show a strong thymus-dependent resistance and usually terminate the infection in the larval stages. The present study examined chronological histopathologic changes in the lumbar lymph nodes and adjacent lymphatic vessels of both hosts. In thymic mice, lymphangitis and perilymphangitis reached a maximum 14 to 17 days PI, about the time of disappearance of live worms. The infiltrate showed characteristics of both acute and chronic inflammation: eosinophils, neutrophils, eosinophilic precipitates, and sometimes necrotizing lymphangitis, as well as macrophages and plasma cells. The cellular infiltrate in nude mice was weaker and developed more slowly. Inflammatory responses to identifiable dead worms were seen in both types of hosts but appeared more frequently in thymic mice. Although variable in both models, the granulomas of thymic mice generally showed more tendency to cavitation, greater macrophage or epithelioid cell infiltration, more granulocytes, and appeared to be more destructive than the foreign body responses of nude mice. Whereas lymphangiectasis was generally progressive in nude mice, it was arrested before the end of the third week in thymic mice. In thymic mice, at maximum lumbar lymph node size (17 days), there were large areas of lymphocyte hyperplasia and heavy infiltration of plasma cells. Most nodes returned to normal mean size by the end of the second month. Little or no reactivity was seen in athymic mouse nodes. Our results suggest that some lesions of lymphatic filariasis are potentially thymus-independent: lymphatic fibrosis, lymphangiectasis, accumulations of macrophages and giant cells around disintegrating worms, calcification of worms, intralymphatic thrombosis, and moderate vascular infiltrates including eosinophils.
Two siblings with a variant form of Fanconi's anemia developed multiple neoplasms after prolonged survival and treatment with androgens. One of the siblings developed two separate oral squamous cell carcinomata, and the other developed acute leukemia and hepatoma. Androgens may have had a carcinogenic role in the appearance of the hepatic neoplasm. There is an increased incidence of neoplasm associated with Fanconi's anemia. This may be related to frequent spontaneous chromosomal aberrations and/or to increased cellular susceptibility to viral transformation.
A retrospective study of private surgical experience (L.J.T.) in the treatment of primary oral carcinoma was undertaken to compare the demographics, disease history, and clinical behavior patterns in women nonusers versus users of tobacco and alcohol. From a clinical group of 109 patients with oral carcinoma, an unexpectedly high percentage were women (41%, 45/109) and of these women, 31% (14/45) were nonusers of either substance. Differences were found in age (71 vs. 60 years), location of the primary tumor (0% vs. 35% floor of mouth), clinical stage at presentation (early, 80% vs. 50%), histologic parameters, clinical behavior patterns, and occurrence of secondary primaries (0% vs. 26%). The differences identified have prognostic and therapeutic implications.
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