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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors assessed a panel of immunohistochemical stains against 109 pediatric solid tumors, primarily rhabdomyosarcomas, under the auspices of the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study. Fresh tumor tissue received from participating organizations was divided into portions that were either frozen or fixed in formalin, alcohol, or B5. Immunostaining was performed by the avidin-biotin complex method using monoclonal antibodies to desmin, neurofilaments, vimentin, cytokeratin, and leukocyte common antigen on cryostat sections. Tissue was also embedded in paraffin and stained with antimuscle-specific actin (MSA) and polyclonal antibodies to desmin, creatine kinase M subunit (CKM), myoglobin, and neuron-specific enolase (NSE). Antidesmin staining of cryostat sections was the most sensitive indicator of rhabdomyosarcoma (58 of 62 specimens positive). Results with this reagent in alcohol-fixed and formalin-fixed tissue were similar (46 of 56 positive versus 43 of 56 positive, respectively) and comparable with results with anti-MSA in formalin-fixed tissue (43 of 55 positive). However, the proportion of cells stained by antidesmin was higher in alcohol-fixed tissue than in formalin-fixed tissue. Staining with antimyoglobin and anti-CKM was much less satisfactory, with positivity rates of 17 of 37 and 11 of 57, respectively, in formalin-fixed rhabdomyosarcomas. Immunostaining of muscle markers revealed evidence of myogenesis in six undifferentiated sarcomas and in two sarcomas with inadequate histologic study on hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections. However, positivity was also noticed in samples of fibromatosis, Wilms' tumor, ectomesenchyoma, peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor, renal rhabdoid tumor,
myositis
ossificans,
malignant fibrous histiocytoma
, and embryonal sarcoma of the liver. The authors conclude that combined use of antidesmin and anti-MSA enhances the diagnosis of childhood sarcomas, especially when employed with other techniques such as electron microscopic study.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical study of childhood rhabdomyosarcomas and related neoplasms. Results of an Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma study project. 171 May 39
Malignant fibrous histiocytoma
of soft tissues (MFH), a mesenchymal tumor of varied morphologic patterns and cell types, sometimes contains bone and cartilage. Such bony and cartilaginous elements in a pleomorphic MFH may pose a difficult diagnostic challenge. An MFH with bone and cartilage can be distinguished from extraosseous osteogenic sarcoma and chondrosarcoma on the basis of qualitative and quantitative features of the osseous and chondroid elements. Five cases of soft tissue MFH containing bone and cartilage reported here showed: 1) that the bony and cartilaginous elements are mostly metaplastic and tend to be in the pseudo-capsule or fibrous septa of the tumor; and 2) that the bony elements may show a zoning pattern with peripheral maturation similar to
myositis
ossificans. In a single case, there was a small amount of "tumor osteoid." However, this was focal and lacked the diffuse and finely divided or ribbon-like pattern generally associated with osteogenic sarcoma. The probability that MFH with bone and cartilage is less aggressive than soft tissue osteogenic sarcoma or chondrosarcoma underscores the importance of accurate histologic diagnosis of these tumors.
...
PMID:The significance of bone and cartilage formation in malignant fibrous histiocytoma of soft tissue. 627 50
The presence of bone and cartilage in some cases of
malignant fibrous histiocytoma
of the soft tissue as a microscopic finding has been reported previously but little note has been taken of the radiologic manifestations of these tumor elements. A series of five such cases with sufficient metaplastic osseous and cartilaginous elements to produce roentgenographic evidence of their presence is reported here. An additional two cases showed only histologic evidence of bone or cartilage formation. The reactive ossification tends to be peripheral in location, involving the pseudocapsule of the sarcoma or its fibrous septa. In three there was a zoning pattern with peripheral or polar orientation, strongly suggesting the diagnosis of
myositis
ossificans. The latter was the diagnosis considered radiologically in four of the five cases.
Malignant fibrous histiocytoma
with reactive bone and cartilage must be considered in the differential diagnosis of soft tissue masses with calcific densities, particularly when these occur in tumors of the extremities.
...
PMID:Malignant fibrous histiocytoma of soft tissue with metaplastic bone and cartilage formation: a new radiologic sign. 628 19
The value of new morphologic methods in the diagnosis of bone tumors is demonstrated in a number of cases. In round cell malignancies (Ewing's sarcoma, malignant lymphoma, neuroblastoma, and anaplastic plasmacytoma) diagnostic accuracy can be improved by electron microscopic and immunohistochemical techniques. New methods are also of value in differentiating the metastatic carcinoma from malignant bone primaries. Electron microscopy may show epithelial cell features (ie, gland structures, desmosomes, and tonofilaments), while immunohistologic investigation of the cytoskeleton may facilitate differentiation of epithelial cells (positive for prekeratin) from mesenchymal cells (positive for vimentin). In the differential diagnosis of typical bone tumors, however, such as osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, and
malignant fibrous histiocytoma
, the value of enzyme histochemical, electron microscopic, and immunohistochemical methods appears somewhat restricted: alkaline phosphatase activity may be increased in both chondrosarcoma and osteosarcoma; collagen type II, the cartilage-specific collagen, is found not only in chondrosarcoma but in osteosarcoma as well. Moreover, osteosarcomas may contain a considerable number of macrophages and histiocytes, and so this feature is worthless in distinguishing osteosarcoma from
malignant fibrous histiocytoma
. A new approach for appraising the malignancy of bone tumors may be through flow cytometric investigation of nuclear DNA content. Osteosarcomas reveal DNA aneuploidies in more than 80% of cases, with a large proportion of cells in the S phase. These features may prove valuable for discerning osteosarcoma from
myositis
ossificans. In contrast to typical giant cell tumor of bone, a rare case of malignant giant cell tumor showed aneuploid cell lines indicating the malignant nature of the tumor.
...
PMID:New cytomorphologic methods in the diagnosis of bone tumors: possibilities and limitations. 660 Jan 11
During ultrastructural examination of a difficult to diagnose tumor, short spacing collagen fibrils (periodicity of banding, approximately 43.2 nm) and native collagen fibrils (periodicity of banding, approximately 53 nm) were found in dilated and vacuolated cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum and the perinuclear cistern. Original diagnoses from several histopathologists included alveolar soft part sarcoma,
malignant fibrous histiocytoma
, atypical fibroxanthoma, and myogenic tumor. The finding of intracisternal collagen (which is but a variety of intracellular collagen) led to the conclusion that this was a fibroblastic neoplasm. This, plus a review of the histologic findings, led to the diagnosis of proliferative fasciitis and
myositis
of childhood.
...
PMID:Intracisternal collagen fibrils in proliferative fasciitis and myositis of childhood. 831 64
Alterations of tumour suppressor genes are considered crucial steps in the development of human cancers. Expressions of p53 protein, a product of the tumour suppressor gene altered most commonly in human cancers examined so far, were investigated immunohistochemically in 18 osteosarcomas and 40 other malignant and benign lesions of bone. A monoclonal antibody clone PAb240, which recognizes a common conformational epitope of mutant p53 proteins, stained nuclei of tumour cells in 12 of 18 osteosarcomas (67%). Six tumours (33%) particularly showed positive immunoreactions in more than half of the tumour cells. PAb240 also stained tumour cells in a small number of other malignant bone tumours, such as
malignant fibrous histiocytoma
, chondrosarcoma, and Ewing's sarcomas. Furthermore, a small number of cells of giant-cell tumours were positively stained. In contrast, PAb240 was completely negative in 21 benign bone tumours and reactive lesions examined. Another monoclonal antibody clone PAb1801, which reacts with both wild- and mutant-type p53 protein, reacted in nuclei of tumour cells of 7 osteosarcomas (39%). Most of those also reacted with PAb240. PAb1801 was expressed much more frequently in other malignant bone tumours and giant-cell tumours. In addition, PAb1801 showed intranuclear positive reactions in tumour cells of a benign chondroblastoma, and reactive cells such as actively proliferating preosteoblasts in a
myositis
ossificans and osteoclast-like giant cells in a giant-cell tumour. The immunoelectron-microscopic observation that p53 protein was localized in euchromatic areas of nuclei of osteosarcoma cells supported the specificity of immunoreaction for p53 protein, indicating an active role of p53 protein in the regulation of DNA synthesis and transcription. These findings suggest that point mutation of the p53 gene is frequently involved in the development of osteosarcomas. PAb240 may be a useful tool not only in screening point mutations of the p53 gene in osteosarcomas but also in the differential diagnosis between osteosarcomas and reactive bone-forming lesions. Expressions of mutant p53 protein were not correlated with any clinical or pathological factors examined, although the results should be confirmed in studies of a large number of osteosarcomas.
...
PMID:Analysis of mutant P53 protein in osteosarcomas and other malignant and benign lesions of bone. 841 91