Publications by authors named "Diane M Pierson"

Article Synopsis
  • Breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma is classified as a distinct type of cancer linked to textured breast implants, prompting new challenges for medical professionals handling patients with these devices.
  • While much focus has been on this more serious lymphoma, benign issues related to breast implants also affect 20-30% of patients, necessitating careful assessment.
  • The review discusses a variety of benign complications, detailing their clinical presentations and imaging features, and outlines a structured method for diagnosing and managing breast implant-related specimens.
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Context: The value of assessing CD5 expression in the differential diagnosis of small B-cell neoplasms is well established. Assessment is usually done qualitatively.

Objectives: To assess CD5 expression levels by quantitative flow cytometry immunophenotyping and to determine possible differences among various small B-cell neoplasms.

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Background: CD26 is expressed by most CD4+ T cells in normal peripheral blood specimens. Neoplastic T cells are frequently CD26- in mycosis fungoides/Sezary syndrome involving the peripheral blood. However, CD26 expression by reactive and neoplastic T cells in solid tissues and body fluids has not been fully characterized by flow cytometry (FC).

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Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (HPS) is a rare heterogeneously inherited autosomal recessive group of disorders presenting with oculocutaneous albinism, bleeding diathesis and pulmonary disease. HPS is thought to occur as a consequence of disturbed formation or trafficking of intracellular vesicles, most importantly, melanosomes, platelet dense granules and lysosomes. The latter finding, in particular, contributes much to the morbidity associated with the disease, as ceroid lipofuscin deposits in lysosomes affect many organ systems.

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We describe the case of a 50-year-old woman with a lung tumor composed of crystal-storing histiocytes. These cells and associated plasma cells failed to show clonal light chain restriction, and the patient had no associated hematologic disorder. The differential diagnosis included crystal-storing histiocytosis, characterized by accumulation of crystallized immunoglobulins, a rare manifestation of monoclonal gammopathies/plasma cell dyscrasias.

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Fryns syndrome is a rare, generally lethal, autosomal recessive multiple congenital anomaly (MCA) syndrome first described in 1979. Patients with the syndrome present with the classical findings of cloudy cornea, brain malformations, diaphragmatic defects, and distal limb deformities. Over 70 patients have been reported revealing a wide variety of phenotypic features.

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Previous studies have shown that docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) has an antihypertensive effect in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). To investigate possible mechanisms for this effect, vascular pathology and reactivity were determined in SHR treated with dietary DHA. SHR (7 weeks) were fed a purified diet with either a combination of corn/soybean oils or a DHA-enriched oil for 6 weeks.

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We report a newborn female with craniofacial malformations, bilateral anophthalmia, large abnormally shaped ears, short neck, small distal phalanges and nails, left diaphragmatic hernia, hypoplastic optic nerves, severe pulmonary hypoplasia, and an accessory spleen, and describe the autopsy findings. The infant expired at 18 h of life. The features were most consistent with Fryns syndrome although other conditions were considered including Matthew Wood syndrome.

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