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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eleven cases of proliferative fasciitis and
myositis
in children, ages 2.5 months to 13 years, are presented. Eight lesions averaging 2.3 cm in size occurred in the extremities, two in the head and neck region and one on the chest wall. Like proliferative fasciitis and
myositis
in adults, these lesions consisted of admixtures of large polygonal to spindled, ganglion-cell-like fibroblasts with vesicular nuclei and prominent inclusion-like nucleoli. Seven of 11 lesions were initially diagnosed as sarcomas, most commonly rhabdomyosarcoma. Four patients were treated by wide excision (three with regional lymphadenectomy), three received chemotherapy, and one was given radiation therapy. There were some histologic differences from adult-type proliferative fasciitis and
myositis
. The childhood lesions were generally well circumscribed, lobulated, extremely cellular with less collagen production, and often associated with acute inflammation and microscopic foci of necrosis. Immunohistochemical comparison with adult proliferative fasciitis and
myositis
showed similar immuneprofiles; the ganglion-like cells stained for vimentin and actin and focally with KP1, suggesting myofibroblastic and histiocytic features. None of the lesions stained for keratin,
desmin
, or S-100 protein. Ultrastructural examination of two cases revealed cells with a constellation of fibroblastic, myofibroblastic, and histiocytic features. Follow-up of seven patients, averaging 58 months from diagnosis, confirmed that all are alive and well. Recognition of this cellular variant of proliferative fasciitis and
myositis
is important to prevent misdiagnosis as a sarcoma and unnecessary, excessive therapy.
...
PMID:Proliferative fasciitis and myositis of childhood. 156 69
Two cases of proliferative
myositis
, four cases of proliferative fasciitis and one mixed form of proliferative
myositis
and fasciitis have been analyzed in terms of cell differentiation and DNA content. Light microscopically, the lesions were characterized by a mixture of proliferating spindle-shaped cells and uni-, bi- or occasionally multinucleated ganglion cell-like cells. The spindle cells showed ultrastructural features and immunohistochemical properties, including an immunoreactivity for smooth muscle-specific actin, indicative of a myofibroblastic differentiation. The ganglion cell-like cells displayed some resemblance to active osteoblasts ultrastructurally and differed immunohistochemically from the spindle cells by being non-immunoreactive for smooth muscle-specific actin. None of the two cell types showed immunoreactivity for
desmin
, myoglobin or factor VIII RAG. It is suggested that the two cell types represent different lines of cell differentiation. The cytologic features in smears, as seen in two cases of proliferative fasciitis and one case of proliferative
myositis
, are considered to be characteristic of these lesions and to permit the diagnosis to be made by fine-needle aspiration. In two of the cases, the lesion was diagnosed only cytologically and thereafter disappeared spontaneously within a month. Cytometric DNA measurements, using two different image analysis systems on Feulgen-stained sections and smears, revealed a "diploid" spindle-shaped cell population with a variable proportion of cells with scattered DNA values. The ganglion cell-like cells differed from the spindle cells by having a broad DNA peak in the diploid region and additional peaks in the tetraploid region, as well as a higher proportion of cells with scattered DNA values compared with those of the spindle-shaped cells. The results of the quantitative DNA analysis are well in keeping with the benign and proliferative nature of these lesions. However, with the technique used here, quantitative DNA analysis, does not distinguish these pseudosarcomatous fibrous lesions from diploid and tetraploid soft tissue sarcomas.
...
PMID:Proliferative myositis and fasciitis. A light and electron microscopic, cytologic, DNA-cytometric and immunohistochemical study. 158 81
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
We studied four cases of proliferative
myositis
by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique, using a panel of 12 antibodies, and by electron microscopy. The aim was to clarify the nature of their constituent cells, specifically the giant ganglion-like cells and spindle cells, and to discuss the implications for histogenesis. In all cases, both cell types showed positive cytoplasmic staining with antibodies to vimentin, actin (C4), and alpha-smooth muscle actin-1, but in only one was there positive staining with
desmin
. No staining was obtained with factor XIIIa, muramidase, alpha-1-antitrypsin, myoglobin, S-100 protein, CAM 5.2, factor VIII-related antigen, or neuron-specific enolase. By electron microscopy, both types of cells were seen to contain numerous thin filaments, dense bodies, coated and pinocytotic vesicles, active and dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum, few microvilli, and incomplete desmosomal junctions. Our findings imply a myofibroblastic nature for the giant ganglion-like cells and spindle cells. Our observations also support the hypothesis that they are derived from a pericytic cell.
...
PMID:Proliferative myositis. An immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study. 205 61
Congenital myopathies are developmental disorders of muscle that are best understood in the context of ontogenesis. Segmental amyoplasia results from a defective somite, usually because of lack of induction by the notochord and neural tube; the connective tissue matrix of the muscle is derived from lateral mesoderm and is present, but the myocytes are derived from somitic mesoderm and are replaced by adipose cells. Generalized amyoplasia is due to defective myogenic regulatory genes. X-linked recessive myotubular myopathy is associated with overexpression of vimentin and
desmin
, fetal intermediate filaments that attach to nuclear, mitochondrial, and inner sarcolemmal membranes and Z-bands of sarcomeres to preserve the morphologic organization of the myotube. Neonatal myotonic dystrophy is a true maturational delay in muscle development. Congenital muscle fiber-type disproportion is a syndrome of multiple etiologies but in some cases is associated with cerebellar hypoplasia and may be the result of abnormal suprasegmental stimulation of the developing motor unit at 20 to 28 weeks' gestation, mediated through bulbospinal pathways but not the corticospinal tract. Maturational delay of muscle in late developmental stages is less specific than in stages before midgestation. The Proteus syndrome is a muscular dysgenesis; abnormal paracrine growth factors and perhaps altered genes that regulate muscle differentiation and growth, such as myoD and myogenin, are the suspected cause. Focal proliferative
myositis
may be another example of a "paracrine myopathy."
...
PMID:New insights into the pathogenesis of congenital myopathies. 800 74
The intermediate filament nestin is transiently expressed in developing skeletal muscle. In the present investigation, we analyzed by immunohistochemistry the presence of nestin, as well as vimentin and
desmin
, in skeletal muscle affected by two diseases characterized by various degrees of necrosis and muscle regeneration: Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy and
myositis
. Nestin-positive areas were found in all analyzed muscle biopsies of both diseases. The same areas were, in most cases, also positive for vimentin and stained more intensely for
desmin
than surrounding myofibers. Only nestin was found specifically in myopathic muscle fibers; vimentin was in addition present in muscle fibroblasts and
desmin
in all myofibers. The areas staining positive for nestin were typically basophilic, small-diameter myofibers, often with centrally located nuclei. With the interesting exception of a 73-year-old healthy control with abundant ring fibers, nestin was not detected in the muscle of healthy controls. The intracellular distribution of nestin in the myopathic muscle fibers, as well as in the ring fibers, was confined to the vicinity of Z-bands. The presence of nestin protein in myopathic regenerating areas and in ring fibers correlated more closely to the presence of
desmin
than to vimentin immunoreactivity. Our results suggest that nestin is specifically expressed in newly formed muscle fibers also during regeneration, and that nestin may serve as a useful marker of regenerating muscle fibers in pathological conditions.
...
PMID:Myofibers from Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy and myositis express the intermediate filament nestin. 802 16
We have studied the immunohistochemical expression of 14 different muscle proteins of the basal lamina, sarcolemma and cytoskeleton in primary sarcoglycanopathies (13 cases) and compared it with Duchenne dystrophy (6 cases) and
myositis
(5 cases). Sarcolemmal proteins (i.e. 4 sarcoglycans, beta-dystroglycan, dystrophin, beta-spectrin) were reduced both in sarcoglycanopathies and Duchenne dystrophy, because of structural and functional impairment of the plasma membrane. Sarcolemmal proteins are poorly expressed in regenerating fibers of all muscle disorders, due to a developmental delay or to an abnormal assembly. Laminins (alpha2 and beta chains) were preserved in all cases while utrophin was expressed in Duchenne muscle but not in sarcoglycanopathies. Regenerating fibers were studied with different markers (i.e. fetal myosin,
desmin
, vimentin, laminin alpha1). Fetal myosin positive fibers (as well as
desmin
and laminin alpha1), were significantly higher in Duchenne dystrophy (25%) than in age-matched sarcoglycanopathies (7%). Vimentin, a marker of early regeneration, was expressed at higher level in sarcoglycanopathies than in Duchenne dystrophy, suggesting in the former a lower extent of regeneration or a shorter regeneration cycle.
...
PMID:Regeneration in sarcoglycanopathies: expression studies of sarcoglycans and other muscle proteins. 1045 Aug 3
The expression of alpha smooth muscle actin, muscle specific actin,
desmin
, h-caldesmon, and calponin was studied immunohistochemically in the following soft tissue and bone tumours and tumour-like lesions: muscle fibromatosis, inflammatory pseudotumours, chondroblastoma, enchondroma, chondrosarcoma, fibrous dysplasia, ossifying
myositis
, osteoblastoma, convential osteosarcoma, leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma. Tumours and tumour-like lesions with myofibroblastic cells, osteoblasts and chondroblasts frequently exhibited intensive immunoreactivity for the muscle markers, and therefore, some of them may occasionally be confused with leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma. Calponin does not help to differentiate various mesenchymal tumours expressing muscle markers, because it also stains intensively myofibroblasts, osteoblasts and chondroblasts. We confirmed that h-caldesmon was expressed intensely in leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas, and never in the other tumours examined, with the exception of three chondroblastomas. The results have shown that h-caldesmon is a rather specific and sensitive marker for smooth muscle tumours, but it can also stain some actin positive myochondroblasts. It is possible that the positivity of h-caldesmon in some chondroblastomas is due to their complete myogenic transdifferentiation, and so we use the term myochondroblasts and myochondrocytes for designation of such S-100 protein, actin, and h-caldesmon positive cells.
...
PMID:[Immunohistochemical differentiation of leiomyocellular tumors and tumors with myogenic differentiation]. 1287 3
Oxidative stress has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several muscle diseases. Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) metabolizes oxidative deamination of primary aromatic and aliphatic amines. In the oxidative reactions, amine substrates are converted into the aldehyde, followed by the production of ammonia and H(2)O(2). Although normal levels in muscle are very low, SSAO is expressed in almost all mammalian tissues. In this study, we examined the possible implication of SSAO as an additional source of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of muscle disorders. The expression of SSAO was examined immunohistochemically in muscle biopsy specimens from patients with inclusion-body
myositis
(IBM; n = 5),
desmin
-related myopathy (DRM; n = 3), dermatomyositis (n = 3), granulomatous (sarcoid) myopathy (n = 2), muscle denervation-reinnervation (n = 3), and rhabdomyolysis (n = 2), as well as from control subjects (n = 3). Strong SSAO immunoreactivity was present in vacuolated and nonvacuolated fibers in IBM, in abnormal fibers in DRM, and in degenerating and regenerating fibers in dermatomyositis and rhabdomyolysis. In addition, SSAO overexpression was observed in muscle fibers adjacent to granulomas in sarcoid myopathy. These results suggest that SSAO is a source of oxidative stress in diseased human skeletal muscle and that it contributes to oxidative stress-induced damage in various inflammatory and other myopathies. Alternatively, the expression of SSAO in muscle fibers may be a consequence of muscle fiber injury.
...
PMID:Overexpression of semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase in human myopathies. 1475 92
Besides tropical spastic paraparesis/human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1)-associated myelopathy, the human retrovirus HTLV-1 causes inflammatory disorders such as
myositis
. Although the pathogenesis of HTLV-1-associated
myositis
is primarily unknown, a direct effect of cytokines or viral proteins in myocytotoxicity is suspected. We have developed an in vitro cell culture model to study the interactions between primary human muscle cells and HTLV-1 chronically infected cells. When HTLV-1-infected cell lines were added to differentiated muscle cultures, cytopathic changes such as fiber shrinking were observed as early as 1 day after contact. This was accompanied by alterations in
desmin
and vimentin organization, occurring in the absence of muscle cell infection but with Tax-1 present in myotubes. Cytopathic changes were also observed when infected culture supernatants were added to the muscle cells. Fiber atrophy and cytoskeletal disorganization were confirmed in muscle biopsies from two HTLV-1-infected patients with
myositis
. Transduction of cultured muscle cells with a lentiviral vector containing the HTLV-1 Tax gene reproduced such effects in vitro. The present data indicate that the myocytotoxicity that is observed in HTLV-1-associated myopathies can be due to a direct effect of the Tax-1 protein expressed in infected inflammatory cells, in the absence of muscle cell infection.
...
PMID:Muscle wasting induced by HTLV-1 tax-1 protein: an in vitro and in vivo study. 1631 74
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