Since first described in the mid 1990s, there has been burgeoning literature on IgG4-related sclerosing disease. The number of sites that may be involved is ever increasing, with the pancreas, salivary glands, and lymph nodes being the most commonly affected organs. There are no well-documented cases arising in the gastrointestinal tract. In this report, we present the first case to our knowledge of IgG4-related sclerosing disease involving the small bowel with a distinctly unusual clinicopathologic presentation. A previously well 46-year-old woman presented with a 2-year history of intermittent abdominal pain with recent worsening due to small bowel obstruction. Following imaging, which showed jejunitis with surrounding mesenteric inflammatory changes, she proceeded to a segmental small bowel resection. The resected jejunum revealed an isolated, stenosing chronic ulcer associated with a necrotizing mesenteric arteritis. A transmural inflammatory infiltrate rich in IgG4 plasma cells was seen in the wall of the bowel and mesenteric artery. Abundant IgG4 interfollicular plasma cells were also identified in a mesenteric lymph node. The serum IgG4 level was elevated at >800 mg/dL (reference range 8 to 140 mg/dL). Although phlebitis is an almost constant feature of this disease, arteritis is not described other than in the lung and aorta. In this report, we also discuss the diagnostic pitfalls and the differential diagnoses that should be considered when this condition arises in the gastrointestinal tract.
Henoch–Schonlein purpura (HSP) is primarily a childhood immunoglobulin A (IgA)-mediated illness. When adults are affected, malignancy can be associated. We present a rare case of HSP in a 75-year-old man with malignant pleural mesothelioma. He presented with episodes of dizziness and subsequently developed non-palpable purpura across his legs, arthralgia, hematuria, proteinuria, and acute renal impairment. HSP was diagnosed based on clinical and histological findings on biopsy specimens from the skin and kidney that showed a leukocytoclastic vasculitis and mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis with IgA deposits, respectively. He was treated with high-dose oral steroids with resolution of the skin and renal manifestations of the disease. HSP is rare in adults but has been linked to cancers. This is the first report of HSP in a patient with known malignant pleural mesothelioma.
Lymphangiomas of the ovary are rare and are usually unilateral. We present a 50-yr-old patient who presented with irregular bleeding secondary to multiple uterine leiomyomas who was found to have bilateral ovarian lymphangiomas. There was no evidence of pelvic lymphatic obstruction or of lymphadenopathy, and this appeared to exclude the possibility of acquired lymphangiectasia. The ovarian tumors were associated with a prominent smooth muscle cell component that partly surrounded many of the dilated vascular spaces to the extent that the diagnoses of lymphangioleiomyoma and lymphangioleiomyomatosis were also considered. However, there was no clinical evidence of lymphangioleiomyomatosis in other sites and the smooth muscle cells did not express melanocytic markers immunohistochemically. Lymphangioma and lymphangioleiomyoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of bilateral, multicystic ovarian neoplasms.
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