Multi-joint disease pathologies in the lumbar spine, including ligamentum flavum (LF) hypertrophy and intervertebral disc (IVD) bulging or herniation contribute to lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS), a highly prevalent condition characterized by symptomatic narrowing of the spinal canal. Clinical hypertrophic LF is characterized by a loss of elastic fibers and increase in collagen fibers, resulting in fibrotic thickening and scar formation. In this study, we created an injury model to test the hypothesis that LF needle scrape injury in the rat will result in hypertrophy of the LF characterized by altered tissue geometry, matrix organization, composition and inflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPRAME (PReferentially expressed Antigen in MElanoma), a cancer-testis antigen expressed in normal and neoplastic tissues with several functions, proved to be a useful diagnostic tool in the differential diagnosis between benign and malignant melanocytic lesions. The current study aims to perform PRAME stain on a retrospective case series of mucosal melanocytic tumors of the head and neck region to compare 3 different scores and evaluate the most reliable one in this diagnostic set. Immunohistochemical analysis for PRAME was performed in 54 benign and malignant mucosal melanocytic tumors of the head and neck region collected from 41 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Non allergic rhinitis (NAR) comprises different clinical definitions and phenotypes, including non inflammatory non allergic (NINAR) and cellular inflammatory forms. Nasal cytology, usually performed by scraping the inferior turbinate, is a non invasive, cheap and point-of-care tool to distinguish among the different NAR phenotypes, but still a relevant proportion of patients evaluated by nasal cytology receive a non precise definition of NAR phenotype. We hypothesize that collecting nasal cytology samples from middle meatus could increase the diagnostic accuracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultifocal fibrosing thyroiditis (MFT) is an enigmatic entity, characterized by multiple fibrotic scar-like lesions with a paucicellular fibrotic center surrounded by a cellular peripheral area with reactive-appearing follicular cell atypia and variable chronic inflammation. Although poorly recognized and likely underreported in surgical pathology, the entity is considered rare with only 65 cases to date-including the current one reported to expand on the preoperative findings of this under-recognized entity. The average age of the patients is 46.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVariable internal jugular vein anatomy is not rare. A high jugular bulb (JB) is reported in 6 to 34% of cases and, it can be jeopardized during middle ear surgery, especially if dehiscent. Its injury represents a threatening complication of ear surgery.
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