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

Pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis (PLCH) is an isolated form of Langerhans cell histiocytosis that primarily affects cigarette smokers. PLCH is characterized by peribronchiolar proliferation of Langerhans cell infiltrates that form stellate nodules. The nodular lesions frequently cavitate and form thick- and thin-walled cysts, which are thought to represent enlarged airway lumina. PLCH lesions display temporal microscopic heterogeneity, with progression from dense cellular nodules to apparently cavitary nodules to increasing degrees of fibrosis that may extend along alveolar walls. In advanced cases, fibrotic scars are surrounded by enlarged, distorted air spaces. Affected patients are typically young adults who often present with cough and dyspnea. The characteristic radiographic features of PLCH are bilateral nodular and reticulonodular areas of opacity that predominantly involve the upper and middle lung zones with relative sparing of the lung bases. High-resolution computed tomography (CT) shows nodules and cysts in the same distribution and allows a confident prospective diagnosis of PLCH in the appropriate clinical setting. In typical cases, a predominantly nodular pattern is seen on CT scans in early phases of the disease, whereas a cystic pattern predominates in later phases. The radiologic abnormalities may regress, resolve completely, become stable, or progress to advanced cystic changes. Treatment consists of smoking cessation, but corticosteroid therapy may be useful in selected patients. Chemotherapeutic agents and lung transplantation may be offered to patients with advanced disease. The prognosis of PLCH is variable with frequent regression, stabilization, or recurrence of disease that does not correlate with cessation or continuation of smoking.
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PMID:From the archives of the AFIP: pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis. 1514 31

Langerhan's cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare disorder in which granulomatous deposits occur at multiple sites within the body. The aetiology is unknown. Is more frequent in children. Presenting symptoms are polyuria and polydipsia, due to diabetes insipidus, other symptoms are skin rash, dyspnea and tachypnea. Diagnosis is reached by biopsy of lesions, in which Langerhan's cell are found. Prognosis is variable, depending the site affected; therefore, treatment must be individually. The hyperprolactinaemia in LCH is very rare and its related with anterior pituitary deficiency. There are not many cases described, all of them during the course of the disease, not as the onset. We describe a 22 year-old woman with Langerhan's cell histiocytosis which initial presentation was fever and hyperprolactinaemia.
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PMID:[Fever and hyperprolactinaemia as the onset of Langerhans cell histiocytosis]. 1645 88

We report a case of multisystem Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) with lung, bone and pituitary involvement. A 20-year-old man developed thirst, polydipsia and polyuria in 1983. He had right femur pain from 1988 and osseous LCH was diagnosed based on the operated specimen in 1989. From July 1990, he had right chest pain on coughing and dyspnea and was admitted in November 1990. LCH involving the lungs was diagnosed by CT images and diabetes insipidus was also detected. Steroid therapy was started from 1991, but he discontinued it in 1998. Though he stopped smoking, his clinical symptoms worsened and he experienced bilateral pneumothoraces in 2002 and since then he has been receiving home oxygen therapy. Pulmonary LCH is thought to have a good prognosis, but in recent studies, its survival rate appears low. We report a case of multisystem LCH with lung deterioration over about 15 years.
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PMID:[A case of multisystem Langerhans' cell histiocytosis with lung deterioration over 15 years]. 1684 15

Erdheim-Chester disease is a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis that is progressive and may lead on to multi-organ involvement. Pulmonary involvement is rare, its presentation is nonspecific, and it carries an adverse outcome. Several radiological features, when considered together, may point to the diagnosis. This condition should be considered in the differential diagnosis of interstitial lung disease. We describe a 39-year-old woman who presented with dry cough, malaise and progressive dyspnoea. She was diagnosed to have late stage interstitial lung disease due to Erdheim-Chester disease.
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PMID:Erdheim-Chester disease: a rare cause of interstitial lung disease. 1730 81

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis with a characteristic long bone lesion. Although about half of the patients have extraosseous organs, pulmonary involvement is very rare. We report a 55-year-old man with ECD who complained of severe dyspnea despite home oxygen therapy with noninvasive positive pressure ventilation. Continuous PGI2 administration was not very effective, but administration of cyclophosphamide and prednisolone induced rapid improvement of respiratory failure and the effect for six months on arterial blood gas analysis and stability of the disease state persisted.
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PMID:[A case of Erdheim-Chester disease effectively treated by cyclophosphamide and prednisolone]. 1731 26

An 80-year-old nonsmoking man was referred to our hospital with bilateral perihilar pulmonary opacities. He had a history of epilepsy, sclerosing cholangitis, cutaneous lesions previously diagnosed as localised Langerhans cell histiocytosis. Symptoms included dry cough and dyspnea. Chest CT showed bilateral perihilar alveolar consolidation with bronchiectasis. Histological examination of a lung biopsy showed typical features of Langerhans cell granulomatosis. Investigations revealed anterior and posterior hypopituitarism. An important improvement occurred with corticosteroid and vinblastine treatment.
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PMID:[Unusual pulmonary presentation of systemic Langerhans cell histiocytosis]. 1828 Nov 29

Granuloma formation is a chronic inflammatory reaction where macrophage system and other inflammatory cells are involved. After some antigen exposure and processing, T cells, macrophages, epithelioid cells, and giant cell are activated, and granulomas are formed. Granuloma is considered as a defense mechanism against antigens, which stay in the organs without inactivation. Granulomas including fibroblasts extra-cellular matrix surround and isolate the antigens. Granulomas are classified to noninfectious granulomas and infectious granulomas. However recent studies revealed pathogenic microorganism are suspected to be a cause of granuloma in non-inflammatory diseases. Balance between pathogenic microorganisms and defense mechanisms of the host might be important in the special immunologic reaction. In some cases, it is hard to clearly classify infectious and noninfectious granulomas. Recently, Eishi et al. reported that latent infection of Propionibacterium acnes might be cause of sarcoidosis. Several hypersensitivity pneumonias are considered to be caused by exogenous microorganisms. The symposium was organized to know and clarify the new mechanisms of non-infectious granulomatous lung diseases and pathogenic microorganisms. This report is a summary of a symposium entitled "Granulomatous Diseases and Pathogenic Microorganism", organized in the 82nd Japanese Society for Tuberculosis (president Dr. Mitsunori Sakatani, M.D.). 1. Imaging of Granulomatous Lung Diseases: Masanori AKIRA (Department of Radiology, National Hospital Organization Kinki-chuo Chest Medical Center) High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) is a useful tool in the evaluation of parenchymal changes in patients with a granulomatous lung disease. In sarcoidosis, the HRCT findings include small, well-defined nodules in relation to lymphatic roots, lymph node enlargement, and middle or upper lobe predominance. The appearances of subacute hypersensitivity pneumonitis include ill-defined centrilobular nodules, ground-glass opacity, and air trapping especially on expiratory CT scan. Those of Langerhans cell histiocytosis include bizarre thin-walled lung cysts, centrilobular nodules and upper lobe predominance. Each of granulomatous lung disease has some characteristic HRCT appearances, but they all are non-specific for diagnosis. HRCT is also useful for grading of parenchymal changes in granulomatous lung diseases. 2. Histopathology of granulomatous lung diseases with special reference to differential diagnosis of infectious disease: Tamiko TAKEMURA (Department of Pathology, Japanese Red Cross Medical Center) The lung is commonly involved by various granulomatous diseases of various etiology. It is difficult to pathologically differentiate these granuloumatous diseases to conduct appropriate therapy, because of morphological similarity of epithelioid cell granuloma, variable etiology, and difficulty of identification of causative agents. Granulomatous diseases generally are divided into infectious and non-infectious ones for treatment. Although infectious granulomas usually reveal necrosis and abscess, non-infectious ones occasionally also reveal necrosis. In cases with granulomas in the lung, it is necessary to explore the etiologic agents including environmental ones. 3. Sarcoidosis and Propionibacterium acnes: Yoshinobu EISHI (Department of Pathology, Tokyo Medical and Dental University) P. acnes can cause latent infection in peripheral lung tissue and the mediastinal lymph nodes and persist intracellularly in a cell-wall-deficient form. This dormant form of P. acnes can be activated endogenously under certain environmental conditions (hormones, stress, living habits, etc.) and proliferate in cells at the sites of latent infection. Granulomatous inflammation occurs in sarcoidosis patients with hypersensitivity to intracellular proliferation of the cell-wall-deficient bacteria, which can infect other cells or organs when spread via the lymphatic or blood streams. The timely use of antibiotics may not only kill the bacteria proliferating at the site of disease activity, but also prevent endogenous activation of P. acnes. If long term administration of antibiotics eradicates dormant forms of the bacteria persistent in organs, it may lead to complete remission of sarcoidosis. 4. Farmer's lung and thermophilic actinomycetes: Takashi MOURI (Pulmonary Division, Iwate Prefectural Kitakami Hospital), Kohei YAMAUCHI, Hiroshi INOUE (Third Department of Internal Medicine, Iwate Medical University, School of Medicine), Kazuki KONISHI (Morioka Tsunagi Onsen Hospital) Farmer's lung is caused by the allergic reaction to inhalation of thermophilic actinomycetes. Acute symptoms are chill, fever, cough and dyspnea. Fine crackles is characteristic. Pathologically, alveolitis with lymphocytes infiltration and epithelioid cell granuloma and Masson's body are characteristics. Bronchoalveolar lavage analysis shows elevated lymphocytes and diverse CD4/8 ratio (high in average). Isolation from the environment improves the symptoms. Sometimes patients need steroid therapy, 0.5 to 1.0 mg/kg of predonisolone. Pulse therapy can be applied for severe cases. SLX analogue can prevent lymphocytes infiltration and granuloma formation in mice model. Some of acute farmer's lung show poor long term prognosis, showing emphysematous, fine granular or small nodules in chest CT. These chronic farmer's lung might be diagnosed as IIPs. 5. Hot tub lung: Takashi OGURA (Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center) Hot Tub Lung (HTL) is a disorder caused by exposure to Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) organisms contaminating hot tub water. Whether this disease represents true infection or hypersensitivity pneumonitis is contoroversial. Recent reports support the theory that this disease represents a hypersensitivity pneumonitis rather than infection. The physicians should suspect a hypersensitivity pneumonitis reaction to MAC in the investigation of patients with hypersensitivity pneumonitis of unknown cause.
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PMID:[Granulomatous diseases and pathogenic microorganism]. 1832 39

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis usually affecting bone, that may progress to multi-organ involvement, with pulmonary involvement as an indicator of poor prognosis. Herein, we present a 48-year-old man with a 2-year history of progressive exertional dyspnoea, dry cough, malaise and exophthalmos. High-resolution computed tomography showed peripheral interstitial thickening with a lymphangitic distribution throughout both lungs, suspected of representing lymphangitic spread of neoplasia. Transbronchial biopsy specimen and bronchoalveolar lavage were non-diagnostic; thus, a surgical lung biopsy was performed which showed features diagnostic of ECD. Subsequent systematic investigations showed widespread bone involvement, cardiac involvement manifested as left heart failure and renal/perirenal disease. Treatment with pulsed corticosteroids and cyclophosphamide elicited neither clinical nor functional response, with death at 6 months. This case highlights the aggressive nature of ECD when there is pulmonary involvement, as well as problems in diagnosis when there is pulmonary presentation and when systemic disease is asymptomatic.
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PMID:Erdheim-Chester disease: pulmonary presentation in a case with advanced systemic involvement. 1846 Aug 66

Over a period of 18 years, 17 patients with proven Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) were treated at the Haematological Clinic in Brno. In 13 of them, the disease was diagnosed at adult age, and 4 patients were referred to the centre with LCH diagnosed at early child age. One of these 4 patients suffered from repeated recurrences of the disease at adult age and was diagnosed with progressive neurodegenerative damage of the CNS at the age of 25 which in its terminal phase resulted in the patient's immobility, loss of sphincter control, incapacity to communicate and death at the age of 32. LCH was diagnosed at adult age in 13 patients. The form with primary bone involvement was detected in 8 out of 13 patients (62%). Only 2 of 13 patients (15%) had multiple bone lesions upon diagnosis, the remaining 6 patients (46%) had only one lesion at the time of diagnosis. Repeated recurrence of bone involvement was only recorded in 3 out of 13 patients (23%). The combination of recurrent bone involvement and the development of lung affection (dyspnoea, irritating cough, nodularities and cysts in HRCT images) were documented in 2 out of 13 patients (15%). One of the patients diagnosed with LCH at the age of37 had repeated recurrence of bone involvement, which was also treated by 2 cycles of high-dose chemotherapy and autologous transplantation. He died of bronchopneumonia due to the affection of the lungs by LCH at 48 years of age. Primary extraoseal (extamedular) involvement was diagnosed in 5 out of 13 patients (38%) (mandibular gum infiltration, single cervical node infiltration, hand skin infiltration, infiltration of the perineal region and infiltration of the hypophysial infundibular and primary lung form of LCH). In the 1st case, excision was the solution applied to the infiltration of the lingual side ofthe gums, without further recurrence. In the 2nd case, the infiltrated region of skin over the metacarpophalangeal joint was irradiated and the infiltration disappeared. In the 3rd case, the first sign ofthe disease was diabetes insipidus in a 34-year-old man, and an infiltrate in the anal region similar to condylomata acuminata. The diagnosis was confirmed 2 years after the development of diabetes insipidus from perianal infiltrates. After treatment with leustatin in 4 cycles (10 mg a day for 5 consecutive days), control MR showed that the infiltration in the hypophysial infundibular had disappeared, while the finding in the perianal region only regressed by 50% after therapy with leustatin, the reason for subsequent application of radiotherapy (20 Gy). The finding in the perianal region is normal one year after therapy, but substitution therapy with adiuretin is still necessary. The 4th patient was a case of LCH with primary pulmonary involvement diagnosed on the basis of HRCT and lavage with an immunohistochemical proof (expression of CD1 and of protein S-100) of a high number of Langerhans cells. The occurrence of LCH at adult age is rare and the disease may affect the skeleton as well as other organs. Therefore each new osteolytic lesion should be submitted for histological exam, as well as each pathologic formation, because diagnosing the disease without a microscopic and immunohistochemical exams is not possible. In the case of occurrence of diabetes insipidus at adult age, LCH should be considered as one of the possible underlying diseases. LCH pulmonary involvement should be considered in patients with an interstitial pulmonary process and the examinations should be focused accordingly (thoracoscopy with sampling for histological exams or bronchoalveolar lavage) plus the indispensable immunohistochemical examination.
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PMID:[Langerhans cell histiocytosis in adult patients--a disease with many faces. Experience of a centre and an overview of the disease symptoms]. 1906 80

Pulmonary Langerhans cell granulomatosis (PLCG) is a smoking-related interstitial lung disease characterized by hyperinflation and/or obstructive pulmonary disease. Pulmonary hypertension is a late complication of advanced pulmonary disease and often portends a poor prognosis. A 24-year-old male patient who had been receiving diltiazem and corticosteroid treatment with the diagnosis of PLCG for four years was examined by the cardiology clinic due to dyspnea and deterioration in his functional capacity. He was in New York Heart Association class III. The electrocardiogram showed sinus rhythm and right bundle branch block. Systolic pulmonary artery pressure (SPAP) was estimated as 80 mmHg with continuous-wave Doppler echocardiography. During right heart catheterization, SPAP was 70 mmHg and the mean pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) was 44 mmHg. Vascular pulmonary reactivity test with adenosine did not result in a significant change in MPAP. Based on these findings, medical treatment was scheduled for the patient.
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PMID:[A rare cause of pulmonary hypertension: pulmonary Langerhans cell granulomatosis]. 1922 25


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