BMC Endocrine Disorders,2023年
Yan Huang, Jing Li, Ye Wang, Yan Bao, Xiaoyan Wu, Ganjun Kang
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BackgroundParathyroid carcinoma (PC) is an uncommon cause of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) and particularly rare in the mediastinum. Herein, we present a case of mediastinal PC and conduct a related literature review.Case presentationWe described a case of a 50-year-old female patient with PHPT due to mediastinal PC. She was initially admitted to a local hospital in her hometown with hypercalcemia and high blood concentrations of PTH (parathyroid hormone). The patient underwent neck parathyroidectomy and pathological examination suggested parathyroid adenoma. Although the overproduction of serum calcium and PTH declined after the surgery, calcium and PTH increased again one month later, so the patient was transferred to our hospital. A 99mTc-sestamibi scan revealed an ectopic finding in the mediastinum, which was also indicated on the CT image. After removing the mediastinal mass, the metabolism of calcium and PTH quickly reverted to normal and the pathologic features of the mass were consistent with PC. By reviewing the related literature, we noticed that only scattered reports were published before 1982, and those were not included in the present review due to their differences with current radiological examination and treatment methods. After excluding outdated studies, we summarized and analyzed 20 reports of isolated mediastinal PC and concluded that. Parathyroidectomy remains the only curative treatment for the disease. Furthermore, the success of treatment directly depends on accurate preoperative localization.ConclusionWith this study, we emphasize the importance of accurate preoperative diagnosis of mediastinal PC and improve clinicians’ understanding of the disease.
Diagnostic Pathology,2023年
Jianmin Ma, Rui Liu, Tingting Ren, Jing Li, Hong Zhang
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BackgroundLigneous conjunctivitis (LC) is a rare inflammatory lesion of the conjunctiva with an unknown etiology. It is easily confused with conjunctiva lymphoma or other diseases in clinical diagnosis, and the lesion is very difficult to treat.Case presentationWe presented a 41-year-old female patient presented with bilateral conjunctival masses for more than six months. The patient had no contributory history of ocular trauma, family history of tumor and drug allergy. Taking the patient’s clinical and pathological features together, we considered this was a case of IgG4 + LC. Completely surgical resection combined with local glucocorticoid treatment might be effective.ConclusionsThis is a very rare case report of immunoglobulin G4 positive LC with only one published case in literature. The typical manifestations of LC are with the appearance of a hard, fibrin-rich, woody pseudomembranous lesion. A large number of lymphocyte and plasma cell are infiltrated in the pathological tissue. Inflammation of LC may cause immune abnormalities, resulting in IgG4 increasing.
Diagnostic Pathology,2023年
Jianmin Ma, Rui Liu, Tingting Ren, Jing Li, Hong Zhang
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BMC Nephrology,2023年
Liu Yang, LiHong Zhang, GuangWei Ren, Tao Wang, Jing Li, ZhiPeng Zhao
LicenseType:CC BY |
BackgroundWe herein described the coexistence of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) and histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis, alternatively known as the Kikuchi disease (KD), secondary to hemodialysis catheter-related bloodstream infection (BSI) caused by Corynebacterium striatum.Case presentationA patient on maintenance hemodialysis had developed persistent fever and Corynebacterium striatum was subsequently identified from the culture of both catheter tip and peripheral blood. During mitigation of the BSI, however, his fever was unabated and ensuing workup further found thrombocytopenia, hyperferritinemia, hypertriglyceridemia, low NK cell activity and a surge in serum CD25 levels. Moreover, biopsy of the bone marrow and lymph node detected histopathological evidence of hemophagocytosis and KD, respectively. Upon these abnormalities, the title-bound diagnosis was considered and the patient was eventually recovered from the treatment of dexamethasone instead of antibiotics. Consistently, aberrations in his serum CD25 levels and NK cell activity had subsided two months after discharge.ConclusionsArguably, this encounter offered a unique chance to unravel the principal pathogenic cascade in immunobiology that made the three entities one disease continuum. As such, our work may add new understandings of HLH and/or KD secondary to severe infections in general and excessive release of cytokines in particular among patients with kidney diseases. The resultant early diagnosis is crucial to initiate appropriate treatment and improve the survival of patients with these challenging and potentially life-threatening disorders.