Publications by authors named "Evelina Mendonca"

Article Synopsis
  • Immunoglobulin heavy chain amyloidosis (AH amyloidosis) is a rare subtype of amyloidosis with limited research on its diagnosis and management.
  • The described case features AH amyloidosis with amyloid goitre, highlighting the importance of mass spectrometry in identifying different amyloid types.
  • This case emphasizes the diagnostic challenges of AH amyloidosis and suggests significant differences in clinical presentation and prognosis compared to other types of amyloidosis.
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Endoscopic ultrasonography is the most accurate procedure for the evaluation of subepithelial lesions. The finding of a homogeneous, hyperechoic, well-delimited lesion, originating from the third layer of the gastrointestinal tract (submucosa) suggests a benign tumor, generally lipoma. As other differential diagnoses have not been reported, echoendoscopists might not pursue a definitive pathological diagnosis or follow-up the patient.

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Epithelioid sarcoma (ES) is a rare malignant neoplasm of the soft tissues with a predilection for distal extremities of young adults. A "proximal" variant was recently described. The preoperative fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) differential diagnosis with necrotizing granuloma, carcinoma, melanoma, and other neoplasms with epithelioid morphology can be difficult and few cases have been described in the literature.

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Background: Secondary involvement of the thyroid gland is rare. Often the origin of the tumor is difficult to identify from the material obtained by fine-needle aspiration cytology. Renal cell carcinoma of the clear-cell type is one of the more common carcinomas to metastasize to the thyroid gland.

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Chondroblastoma is a benign bone neoplasm, which usually presents in the epiphysis of long bones, but can occur in unusual locations. This report describes the clinical, radiologic, and cytologic features on FNA of two chondroblastomas of the temporomandibular region that were only recognized by histopathologic study. This emphasizes the diagnostic pitfalls of this entity and expands the cytologic differential diagnosis of tumors of the parotid region.

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Fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) is a technique that can overcome tissue-sampling disaggregation problems related to DNA flow cytometry analysis. The aim of this study, with long-term follow-up (median, 72 mo), was to investigate the prognostic value of DNA ploidy and S-phase fraction (SPF) in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), and additionally, the relevance of SPF in the grading of NHLs, using FNAC. The series comprised 76 patients with NHL (32 indolent and 44 aggressive tumors, including 14 Burkitt lymphomas) and 30 patients with reactive lymph node enlargement used as a control group.

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Different techniques of molecular biology have been used to screen for RET rearrangements. More recently, immunohistochemistry has been used, assuming that RET is not expressed in normal thyroid follicular cells. The present study was designed to define the prevalence of RET expression in patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma, by immunohistochemistry and by RT-PCR; to search specifically for RET/PTC-1; -2; -3 rearrangements using RT-PCR, and to compare results obtained by immunohistochemistry with those obtained by RT-PCR.

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Objective: To determine the usefulness of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) detection of parathormone (PTH) gene mRNA in needle aspirates to confirm the parathyroid nature of suspicious cervical lesions in patients with hyperparathyroidism.

Study Design: Ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) was performed on 12 patients with suspected parathyroid adenomas. The aspirates were subjected to cytologic and chromogranin A examination.

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Objective: TO assess the prognostic value of immunocytochemically assessed hormone receptor expression and DNA flow cytometry data in advanced breast cancer.

Study Design: This prospective study with long-term follow-up evaluated the above parameters in relation to overall survival in 392 patients with advanced breast cancer (stages IIB, n = 106; IIIA, n = 66; IIIB, n = 174; and IV, n = 46) using fine needle aspiration cytology.

Results: Estrogen and progesterone receptor positivity was detected in 65.

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