Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 20-year-old male developed both coccygeal and leg pain and followed by rectocystic disturbance. Disc herniation between L5 and S was suspected and laminectomy was performed. At surgery, an easily curretable tumor occupied the epidural space from L5 to the end of the sacrum. In part, the tumor spread out of the vertebral canal and invaded the surrounding muscle tissue. This muscle tissue and part of the lamina were checked histologically. Initial blood analysis revealed 5% blast-like cells, but failed to confirm them as leukemic cells. Histologically, the tumor cells had round or oval nuclei with large nucleoli and scanty cytoplasm without granulocytic differentiation. Malignant lymphoma or Ewing's sarcoma was initially suspected, but the definite diagnosis was uncertain. Immunohistochemical staining with the PAP method and enzyme histochemistry revealed that the tumor cells were positive for lysozyme and naphthol ASD chloracetate esterase. Thus, granulocytic sarcoma was finally diagnosed. Electron microscopic findings supported this diagnosis. Subsequent karyotyping of bone marrow cells revealed 8; 21 translocation, thus the final diagnosis of this patient was myelodysplastic syndrome, refractory anemia with excess blast cells in transformation or acute myelogenous leukemia, M2, by the FAB classification.
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PMID:A case of epidural granulocytic sarcoma preceding acute leukemia. 209 94

Forty-two cases of Ewing's sarcoma (ES) have been studied with light microscopy during the 9-year period 1974 to 1982. Thirty-three patients had ES of bone, and in 9 patients the tumor was located in the extraskeletal soft tissues. Cases which fulfilled all the morphologic criteria were accepted as typical ES (31 cases), and those with some architectural or cytologic peculiarities were considered atypical forms of ES (11 cases). An immunohistochemical study (PAP method) to evaluate the presence in the tumor cells of the following markers: myoglobin, F-VIII-related antigen, lysozyme, alpha-1-antitrypsin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, and immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM, kappa and lambda light chains), was performed with negative results in all cases (paraffin blocks were available in 38 cases). The cytochemical study on fresh tissue imprints from five patients (PAS, Sudan Black, alpha-naphthyl acetate esterase, acid phosphatase, beta glucuronidase, myeloperoxidases, naphthol-AS-D chloroacetate esterase and alkaline phosphatase) gave no pattern of histogenetic significance, PAS being the best morphologic marker in tissue sections and touch preparations. A detailed ultrastructural study was performed on 34 cases; the main findings may be summarized as follows: medium sized cells, polygonal shape, oval nuclei, smooth nuclear envelope, abundant euchromatin, well-developed nucleolonema, scant membranous organelles, abundant hyaloplasmic glycogen, occasional lipid vacuoles, straight cell membranes, and primitive intercellular junctions. No differences were found between bone and extraskeletal ES; moreover, typical and atypical forms showed moderate quantitative differences with no qualitative change. The histogenesis is discussed; no functional or morphologic markers have been found to suggest the cell of origin; however, some cell lines may be excluded. It is the impression of the authors that they are dealing with a primitive noncommitted mesenchymal cell.
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PMID:On the histogenesis of Ewing's sarcoma. An ultrastructural, immunohistochemical, and cytochemical study. 636 49

Angiomatoid "malignant" fibrous histiocytoma (AMFH) has been considered to be a low-grade sarcoma of childhood, and, with its fibrous pseudocapsule, angiomatoid change, dense lymphoplasmacytic response, and proliferation of spindled or round cells, has been classified as a fibrohistiocytic neoplasm. We wanted to study the clinicopathologic and immunophenotypic features of a large number of these tumors and to especially further explore their myoid differentiation. Cases coded as AMFH from 1979 to 1995 were retrieved from the Soft Tissue Registry of the AFIP. Only cases that met the criteria for AMFH by light microscopy were included, a total of 158 cases. Immunohistochemistry was obtained on 98 cases. Clinical history on 92% of all cases revealed a gender ratio of 1.3 females: males, age range of 2 to 71 years, median size of 2.0 cm, and a distribution of extremities > trunk > head and neck, with 66% lesions occurring in areas of normal lymphoid tissue. All tumors with available margins were well-circumscribed. Eighty percent of cases had some degree of lymphoplasmacytic infiltration; 50% cases had pseudovascular spaces filled with blood. Fifty-two percent had predominantly round cell morphology; 48% had a predominantly spindle cell pattern. Desmin positivity was noted in 51% cases and occurred in both predominantly round cell and spindle cell tumors. Most of the desmin-positive cases with adjacent lymphoid infiltrate (67%) showed scattered similar, desmin-positive cells in the surrounding lymphoid infiltrate, adjacent to the tumor. Muscle-specific and smooth-muscle actins were seen in 14% cases. Heavy-caldesmon was strongly positive in 3%, and calponin was focally positive in 73% and extensively positive in 12% cases. MyoD1, myoglobin, and myogenin (myf4) were negative in all tumors studied. Forty-five percent of cases were positive for CD99; 52% of these had round cell morphology. Fifteen percent of cases were positive for KP-1. All tumors were positive for vimentin and negative for CD21, CD35, S100 protein, CD34, keratins 8/18, and lysozyme. Clinical follow-up on 86 patients indicated that only 1 patient was alive with a local nodal metastasis (1% frequency of metastasis) within 1 year, and 2 others had local recurrence, all over a mean follow-up period of 6 years. The myoid, primarily myofibroblastic, phenotype of these lesions is supported by desmin, calponin, and occasional actin positivity. The occasional heavy-caldesmon and smooth muscle actin additionally suggest rare smooth muscle phenotype; however, lack of skeletal muscle markers indicate no relationship of AMFH to skeletal muscle tumors. The resemblance of these lesions to lymph nodes, clinically and morphologically, the finding of similar desmin positive cells in the adjacent lymphoid infiltrate, and the fact that 66% cases were found in sites of normal lymphoid tissue raise the possibility that some of these lesions may arise from or be related to myoid cells of lymphoid tissue. AMFH has an almost invariably benign behavior, but the 1% metastatic rate warrants its classification as low-grade "malignant." The predominantly round cell, CD99-positive and desmin positive AMFH cases, respectively, should not be confused with Ewing's sarcoma/PNET or rhabdomyosarcoma, respectively.
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PMID:Angiomatoid "malignant" fibrous histiocytoma: a clinicopathologic study of 158 cases and further exploration of the myoid phenotype. 1057 14