The pathogenic significance of fetal contamination by candida appears to depend largely on gestational age. Candida infection of the fetus can result in prematurity and death. The importance of early and accurate diagnosis of intraamniotic infection with candida is emphasized.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a herpesvirus whose only reservoir host is the human. It is transmitted by oropharyngeal secretions. Primary EBV infection is usually asymptomatic, but sometimes it causes infectious mononucleosis with fever, lymphadenopathies, splenomegaly and pharyngitis. Acute infection is diagnosed by serology (heterophile or specific antibodies). Immunofluorescence and molecular biologic techniques may be used to demonstrate the presence of EBV in biopsy specimens. Mild and transient elevations of serum aminotransferases are common, thus liver biopsy is usually not necessary to confirm the diagnosis. Severe cholestasis is rare (5%). We describe a patient with cholestatic hepatitis and acute EBV infection with atypical lymphocytes and positive anti-VCA IgM. The patient had taken drugs (ibuprofen, paracetamol and valerian). The bad evolution of the patient, the history of exposure to drugs, and the few cases of cholestatic hepatitis due to EBV infection reported, led us to consider liver biopsy. Molecular biologic techniques confirmed the presence of EBV in liver tissue however histologic features did not exclude the toxic aetiology or the concomitant effect of drugs and EBV infection.
Introduction
Microsatellite instability occurs due to a series of mutations in the DNA pairing error repair (Mismatch repair; MMR) genes, which can affect germ cells as occurs in Lynch syndrome, whose patients are at high risk of developing multiple cancers. The loss of MMR protein is commonly determined by immunohistochemical studies. Although the relation between microsatellite instability and urothelial carcinomas has been widely studied, its evaluation is not currently performed in the analysis of urothelial carcinomas.
Methods
In this study, the microsatellite status of 139 urothelial carcinomas was analyzed and their clinicopathological characteristics were evaluated. We identified that 10.3% (13 patients) of urothelial carcinomas had loss of MMR protein expression (9 MLH1; 5 MSH2; 2 PMS2; 2 PSH6; n = 139).
Results
Results suggest that these tumors occur more frequently in males, are more frequently located in the bladder or ureters, and present a high tumor grade with a papillary histological pattern that does not infiltrate the lamina propria or, in the case of infiltrating tumors, that grows into perivesical tissues.
Conclusions
We identified patients with the aforementioned tumor characteristics as patients with a high probability of presenting loss of MMR protein expression, and consider that only these patients should undergo further immunohistochemical and molecular techniques for proper diagnosis. Therefore, we propose that the clinicopathological characteristics found in the present study could become possible markers to determine which cases should undergo additional tests.
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