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Query: UMLS:C0019625 (
Rosai-Dorfman disease
)
763
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors report on 21 cases of "primary" xanthoma of bone. Twenty of the patients were older than 20 years old. The male-female ratio was 2:1. The presenting symptom was pain in 13 patients and neurologic symptoms in 2; in 6 patients, the lesion was an incidental finding. All but one of the lesions in this series were solitary, and the flat bones (pelvis, rib, skull) were the most frequently involved sites. Radiographically, a well-defined, sometimes expansile lytic lesion, with either a small area of surrounding reactive bone or a distinct sclerotic margin, was seen. Microscopically, foam cells, giant cells, cholesterol clefts, and fibrosis were present in varying degrees. In none of these cases was there an identifiable underlying lesion. The differential diagnosis includes Erdheim-Chester disease (a multisystemic granulomatosis) and bone involvement in sinus histiocytosis with massive lymphadenopathy (
Rosai-Dorfman disease
). More important is the differential diagnosis with metastatic clear cell carcinoma. Xanthoma of bone is a benign lesion, and complete or even partial removal is effective. Xanthomas may represent a "burnt-out" benign condition such as fibrous
dysplasia
or histiocytosis X.
...
PMID:Xanthoma of bone. 314 Jun 52
There have been no reports on choromosomal aberrations of benign bone tumors revealed by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). CGH analysis of benign tumors may be useful in understanding the mechanism of tumorigenesis with comparisons to malignant tumors. There were 4 tumors (2 enchondromas, one chondromyxoid fibroma, and one osteoid osteoma) and 8 tumor-like conditions (4 aneurysmal bone cysts (ABCs), one eosinophilic granuloma, one fibrous
dysplasia
, one solitary bone cyst, and one
Rosai-Dorfman disease
) available for analysis. One of 2 enchondromas and one of 4 ABCs exhibited rapid growth. Six lesions showed chromosomal aberrations, while 6 others did not. The most frequent aberrations were the loss of a whole chromosome-19 in 6 cases, the loss of chromosome-arm 22q in 4 cases, and the loss of chromosome-arm 17p in 3 cases. Gains were seen in 13q21 in 2 cartilaginous tumors and at 12q15-q21 in eosinophilic granulomas. Therefore, in benign bone tumors or tumor-like lesions, chromosomal aberrations are not frequent; however, some clear tendencies of clustering of aberrations can be observed.
...
PMID:Genetic imbalances in benign bone tumors revealed by comparative genomic hybridization. 1564 Sep 55
The demographics, clinical features, and histopathological classification of orbital space-occupying lesions in adults have not been widely described in our part of the world except for the pediatric population. In this retrospective study, we collected 110 consecutive adult patients (18 years and older) with orbital lesions (excluding lacrimal gland lesions) that were diagnosed histopathologically in two tertiary eye centers in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (January 2000 to July 2017). Patients with thyroid-related orbitopathy, infectious, and inflammatory/pseudo-inflammatory lesions were excluded. We had 60 males (54.5%) and 50 females (45.5%). The mean age at presentation was 51.4 years (range 19-99). Proptosis was the most common clinical presentation (mean duration 15.4 months). The orbital lesions in order of increasing prevalence were: lymphoproliferative lesions in 26.4%; vascular in 21.8%; secondary tumors in 14.6%; neurogenic in 13.6%; structural in 10.0%; soft tissue tumors 8.2%; then metastatic tumors (2.7%) and others (extramedullary leukemia, fibrous
dysplasia
, and histiocytic lesion:
Rosai-Dorfman disease
): one case each. Gender distribution was varied in lymphoproliferative disorders compared to vascular lesions. Cavernous hemangioma was the most common vascular lesion (83.3%) and schwannoma was the most common neurogenic tumor (60%). Secondary lesions extended to the orbit mostly from eyelids in nine out of 16 or conjunctiva in four out of 16 cases. A favorable outcome was observed in about 80% of patients who underwent excisional biopsy. The rest encountered local recurrence of the tumors, growing of residual lesions, and recurrence with further invasion to nearby structures. We concluded having a similar demographic pattern of orbital lesions in adults as has been universally reported. We have fewer secondary tumors. We have summarized the pathological profile of adult orbital lesions according to patients' age, gender, symptoms, and location of the lesion as a baseline guide for proper diagnosis of any orbital mass prior to surgical management planning and for future prognostic studies.
...
PMID:Adult Orbital Lesions in Saudi Arabia: A Multi-centered Demographic Study with Clinicopathological Correlation. 3295 8