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Query: UMLS:C0019621 (Langerhans cell histiocytosis)
3,250 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare form of non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. Herein we describe documented skeletal and pericardial involvement by ECD producing cardiac tamponade in a 30-year-old woman. The diagnosis of ECD was established by histopathology, immunocytochemistry, and by radiologic studies demonstrating diffuse, bilateral, symmetrical osteosclerosis of the long bones, sparing the epiphyses and axial skeleton. Scintography using methyl diphosphonate showed increased uptake in involved bone. The patient presented with jaundice and hepatic congestion produced by cardiac tamponade. Pericardial biopsy revealed xanthogranulomatous lesions comprised of foamy and lipid-laden macrophages, multinucleated giant cells, monocytes, and lymphocytes in a mesh of fibrosis. Immunohistochemical staining was positive for CD68 and negative for CD1a, consistent with ECD rather than with the much more common Langerhans cell form of histiocytosis.
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PMID:Erdheim-Chester disease with prominent pericardial involvement: clinical, radiologic, and histologic findings. 1218 13

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare, non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. It is characterized by osteosclerosis of the metaphyseal regions of long bones and several extraskeletal manifestations. Clinically, it ranges from an asymptomatic focal process to systemic disease with life-threatening visceral involvement. Until now, only two cases of Erdheim-Chester disease with paraparesis have been reported. Herein we report the first case of Erdheim-Chester disease with the clinical manifestation of paraplegia. Our patient also had diabetes insipidus, pleural and pericardial effusion, retro-orbital and cavernous sinus masses, fibrotic changes in the retroperitoneal, perirenal, and periaortic areas, and epidural space-occupying lesions. We want to emphasize that ECD may be a very rare cause of paraplegia.
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PMID:Erdheim-Chester disease: a rare cause of paraplegia. 1255 12

Differentiation among various non Langerhans cell histiocytoses granulomatous in adults is often difficult. Patients, moreover, may not have endocrinologic abnormalities. A 53-yr-old patient was admitted owing to central diabetes insipidus and partial hypopituitarism. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a space-occupying lesion near the hypophyseal stalk, along with diffuse signal uptake in the cerebellar region. Laboratory chemistry showed monoclonal gammopathy of IgGkappa, and hormone tests disclosed insufficiency in the gonadotropic and somatotropic axes. The clinical picture was marked by multiple cutaneous xanthogranulomas, ataxic gait with blurred speech, compatible with pseudobulbar pontocerebellar symptomatology. Stereotactic pituitary biopsy was histologically classified as nonspecific granulomatous disease. Supplemental biopsies taken from the cutaneous periorbital xanthogranulomas were histologically and immunohistochemically consistent with non Langerhans cell histiocytosis. Systemic cortisone treatment as well as local radiotherapy to the pituitary lesion with a total of 18.0 gy had no impact on the progression of disease-growing tumor and progressing neurologic symptoms. Systemic granulomatoses cannot always be classified according to specific defined diseases. Differential diagnosis in the current patient should include the possibility of Erdheim-Chester disease, necrobiotic xanthogranuloma, and adult disseminated xanthoma.
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PMID:Problems in differential diagnosis of non Langerhans cell histiocytosis with pituitary involvement: case report and review of literature. 1266 54

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare disorder with fewer than 80 cases reported in the world. It consists of a non-Langerhans' cell histiocytosis that usually presents as pain due to bone involvement; however, the prognosis is marked by extraskeletal involvement. Although the final diagnosis needs an anatomophatologic study (normally through a bone biopsy), radiologic and scintigraphic findings are quasi pathognomonic. In this work, we report 2 ECD cases and their respective bone scans showing typical findings described in the literature. We found bilateral and symmetrical increased uptake of diaphyses and metaphyses of long bones, mainly in lower limbs. The mid-diaphyses and the epiphyses (partially in the first case) as well as the axial skeleton are spared.
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PMID:[Bone scintigraphy in Erdheim-Chester disease]. 1284 51

A 38-year-old man presented with numerous dermal nodules, similar to xanthoma disseminatum, that were histologically consistent with his diagnosis of Erdheim-Chester disease, a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. Other cutaneous manifestations of this disease include eyelid xanthelasma, pretibial dermopathy and pigmented lesions of the lips and buccal mucosa. The histological diagnosis of Erdheim-Chester disease was originally made on the patient's retroperitoneal tissue, obtained at a laparotomy for surgical treatment of a presumed phaeochromocytoma, and confirmed by the pathognomonic long bone X-ray findings of this disease.
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PMID:Erdheim-Chester disease. 1286 45

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a disseminated non-Langerhans' cell histiocytosis with multisystem involvement, including characteristic sclerotic musculoskeletal lesions. We present the case of a 27-year-old woman with a fulminant course and atypical involvement by ECD manifesting as extensive cerebrovascular disease and lytic musculoskeletal lesions. This case represents an unusual and aggressive presentation of ECD owing to the patient's young age, the severity of the cerebrovascular involvement and the lytic osseous lesions.
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PMID:Aggressive and atypical manifestations of Erdheim-Chester disease. 1467 30

In this review the authors focus on Erdheim-Chester disease, a rare systemic disorder of unknown etiology, likely neoplastic, characterised by xantogranulomatous infiltrates of foamy, lipid-laden histiocytes in all involved sites, principally bone, retroperitoneum, lung, pleura, pericardium, retroorbital tissue and brain; moreover periadventitial tissue of the aorta and major arteries may be present. The clinical picture and the course are very various. Erdheim-Chester disease belongs to histiocytosis and differs from Langerhans' cell histiocytosis for clinical, histologic and immunohistochemical features. After the observation of 2 cases we have reviewed the literature; we think useful to present the principal features of the disease, which is likely more frequent than expected; Erdheim-Chester disease is rarely diagnosed because of the poor knowledge of the disease, which is not reported on the common textbooks of medicine.
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PMID:[Erdheim-Chester disease]. 1507 96

We make a retrospective evaluation of clinical and radiologic features, treatment, and outcome of Erdheim-Chester disease, a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. We report a case of Erdheim-Chester disease and review 60 cases from the literature. These cases are consider to have Erdheim-Chester disease when they have either typical bone radiographs (symmetrical long bones osteosclerosis) and/or histologic criteria disclosing histiocytic infiltration with distinctive immunohistochemical phenotype of the non-Langerhans cell histiocytes with positive staining for CD68 and negative staining for S-100 protein and CD1a. Our patient undergoes chemiotherapy according to the LCH-II stratification and therapy plan (Vinblastine, Etoposide and Prednisone) and thereafter receives Carboplatin and Etoposide, and Somatostatin. She is alive and clinically well 33 months after onset of symptoms and the lesions don't appear to progress at imaging examinations. In conclusion, Erdheim-Chester disease may be confused with Langerhans cell histiocytosis as it sometimes shares the same clinical (exophthalmos, diabetes insipidus) or radiologic (osteolytic lesions) findings. However, the characteristics radiological pattern of Erdheim-Chester disease together the immunohistochemical phenotype of hystiocytic infiltration supports the theory that Erdheim-Chester disease is a unique disease entity distinct.
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PMID:[Erdheim-Chester disease: a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. A clinical-case and review of the literature]. 1534 69

The authors present the case of a 27-year-old woman with Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) and extensive intracranial involvement, in whom the initial diagnosis of ECD was established based on computerized tomography (CT)-guided stereotactic biopsy of a caudate lesion. Erdheim-Chester disease is a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis of unknown origin that is clinically characterized by bone pain, diabetes insipidus, and exophthalmos. The radiological hallmarks of the disease include symmetrical sclerosis of the long bones with epiphysial sparing and increased tracer uptake in lesions seen on scintigraphic imaging. Erdheim-Chester disease is characterized histologically by the presence of infiltrating lipid-laden histiocytes that commonly involve the retroperitoneum, orbits, skin, pericardium, lungs, and long bones. Although the occurrence of diabetes insipidus often precedes the diagnosis of ECD by more than a decade in most patients, magnetic resonance imaging- and CT-documented central nervous system involvement is exceedingly rare. In the setting of neurological involvement, neurosurgical biopsy has been reported seven times in the literature, with only one of these biopsies being the basis for the initial diagnosis of the disease. The authors' case represents only the second time the disease has been diagnosed by means of neurosurgical biopsy, highlighting the diagnostic difficulties that patients with EDC present. Skeletal radiographs were confirmatory in this case and this modality should be emphasized as the simplest and most direct route to the diagnosis. The degree of neurological involvement further distinguishes the case presented from prior reports in the literature. The multiple bilateral intraaxial lesions were intensely enhancing on contrast CT scans, distributed infra- and supratentorially, involving both white and gray matter, and associated with diffuse cerebral edema. The case presented is also remarkable by virtue of the symmetrical involvement of the caudate nuclei, representing the first such example documented in the literature. The diagnosis, treatment, and outcome in this patient are discussed, and a review of the literature is presented.
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PMID:Diagnosis of Erdheim-Chester disease by using computerized tomography-guided stereotactic biopsy of a caudate lesion. Case report. 1535 12

We report the occurrence of unilateral cerebral hemisphere edema with subsequent cortical laminar necrosis in the setting of familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) and permanent neurologic sequelae after resolution of an attack in 1 patient. Contemporaneous with this severe attack of FHM, the patient was found to exhibit multiple systemic and neurological symptoms referable to Erdheim-Chester disease (a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis) that was confirmed by bone biopsy. This case demonstrates the severity possible with a migrainous infarction associated with FHM. The co-occurrence of two such rare entities in 1 patient suggests a possible relationship.
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PMID:Familial hemiplegic migraine, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and Erdheim-Chester disease. 1544 1


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