Publications by authors named "Rusnock E"

Light chain deposition disease (LCDD) in the lung is a rare occurrence. We describe 5 new cases of this entity, review the literature, and compare pulmonary light chain deposits to pulmonary amyloidosis. In addition, we identified 17 patients with pulmonary LCDD in the literature with sufficient clinical information to allow evaluation of clinical presentation, laboratory findings, histologic appearance, and disease progression.

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Thrombotic complications, particularly microthrombi involving intraabdominal veins leading to intestinal ischemia, have remained a major cause of morbidity in patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). While intestinal ischemia has been postulated to be the cause of recurrent bouts of abdominal pain in this population, direct antemortem evidence for this complication is scarcely documented in the literature. We describe a case of PNH in a patient who presented with abdominal distress three years after the initial diagnosis was established.

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In 1977, a case report was published describing a 28-year-old women with an endometrial stromal tumor that showed foci of myogenic differentiation. The term "stromomyoma" was introduced to encompass both this type of neoplasm as well as "uterine neoplasms resembling ovarian sex-cord tumors" (UTROSCTs). More than 17 years later, the tumor recurred, involving the right ovary, sigmoid colon, small bowel, abdominal wall and omentum.

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Pituitary adenomas rarely are metastatic. Extracranial visceral metastases of prolactinomas were not previously reported. The authors report a case of a 34-year-old man with a prolactin-producing pituitary carcinoma and histologically proven lung metastases.

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A primary leiomyosarcoma of the right adrenal gland is reported in a 49-year-old male who presented with progressive flank pain. This is the second case in the English language literature and the first to have documentation of malignant behavior. The tumor measured 11 cm in diameter and showed marked necrosis with prominent mitotic activity (average 15 per 10 high-power fields).

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Gingival granular cell tumor of the newborn, or congenital epulis, is a rare congenital lesion of uncertain histogenesis located exclusively on the alveolar ridge with marked predilection for female infants. Although histologically similar to the more ubiquitous granular cell tumor or myoblastoma, ultrastructural and immunohistochemical studies support separate histogenetic pathways for the two lesions. A newborn female infant with three gingival granular cell tumors is described herein along with immunohistochemical and ultrastructural observations.

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This analysis of the morphology of suspected amiodarone (AD) liver disease is based on a study of liver specimens from 17 individuals. Changes similar to alcoholic liver injury were commonly seen. Steatosis, both macrovesicular and microvesicular, was the most frequent histopathologic feature.

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An epithelial cell line, RSMTx, has been established from the submandibular gland of weanling Fisher 344 rats by treatment of explanted tissue clumps with 3-methylcholanthrene. These cells exhibit a polygonal shape on light microscopy and a polar appearance, with desmosomes, terminal bar-like structures, surface microvilli and cytoplasmic interdigitations, when examined by electron microscopy. The cells react positively with an antiserum to cytoskeletal keratin, and a commercial monoclonal antibody to an "epithelial membrane antigen.

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Langerhans cells were detected in squamous, stratified epithelia lining human dermoid cysts. Their presence was assayed by ATPase staining and reactivity with heteroantisera against "Ia-like" antigens. Transmission electron microscopic studies demonstrated variations in the numbers of cells showing Birbeck granules in epithelia with different degrees of keratinization.

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