Intravascular lymphomatosis (IVL) is a rare, malignant B- or T-cell lymphoma with remarkable affinity for the endothelial cells of small vessels, particularly within the skin and central nervous system. It is a disease that mimics several neurological disorders, particularly those of cerebrovascular ischemic origin. The prognosis is generally poor, with a rapidly fatal outcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlomus tumor, also known as glomangioma, is a neoplasm derived from cells of the neuromyoarterial glomus or glomus body. We report a case of glomus tumor of the lung arising in the left lower lobe, incidentally found in a patient who underwent right bilobectomy for a carcinoma localized in the right upper lobe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpinal cavernous angiomas are rare vascular malformations occurring mainly in the vertebral body with or without an extradural extension. Only 3-5% of these lesions are entirely located in the spinal canal where they can occupy an extradural, intradural-extramedullary or intramedullary position. We present a 75-year-old woman with signs and symptoms of multiple lumbar radiculopathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSetting: Clinical features of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated tuberculosis depend upon the patients' residual immunity. An immune-dependent presentation has also been described at the histopathological level in many extra-pulmonary sites, but no descriptions have so far been made on the histopathology of HIV-associated pulmonary tuberculosis.
Objective: To compare the histopathological features of pulmonary tuberculosis in HIV-infected subjects and seronegative patients.