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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We present a 66-year-old man who had maculopapular pigmented lesions on the skin of the head, neck and trunk suggesting generalized eruptive histiocytoma (GEH). These lesions had a yellowish centre in a target-like pattern that has not been previously described. The patient suffered from diplopia and had a severe sensorimotor polyneuropathy causing progressive
paresis
of the limbs. The explorations performed disclosed the presence of specific xanthomatous infiltrates in the skin, lungs, respiratory tract, peripheral nerves and meninges, suggesting xanthoma disseminatum (XD) or juvenile xanthogranuloma. Multiple osteolytic lesions of large bones were also found. The infiltrate was CD68, MAC 387 and factor XIIIa positive and S-100 and
CD1
negative. Some cells contained worm-like bodies visible by electron microscopy. Our patient presented clinical and immunohistochemical findings suggestive of GEH, juvenile xanthogranuloma or XD, supporting the idea of a wide spectrum of non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. These specific target-like xanthomatous lesions seem to be unique for this new variant of XD.
...
PMID:Systemic xanthohistiocytoma: a variant of xanthoma disseminatum? 958 Jan 48
Two adult male castrated dogs were evaluated for progressive paraparesis and ataxia. Neurologic examination showed severe ataxia, delayed proprioceptive placement in the pelvic limbs, pain upon palpation of the lumbar spine as well as facial
paresis
in one dog, and decreased withdrawal reflex of the pelvic limbs in the other dog. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in both dogs showed diffuse meningeal and intramedullary lesions. However, no evidence of a mass was found. Biopsies could not be performed safely due to the location of the lesions. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination revealed an inflammatory pleocytosis associated with increased protein concentration and numerous large atypical round cells, often multinucleated. Nuclear fragmentation, micronuclei, and rare atypical mitoses were observed. Immunocytochemistry revealed
CD1
(+) and CD11c(+) staining, which, in concert with the morphology confirmed the diagnosis of histiocytic sarcoma (HS). Euthanasia was elected due to poor prognosis. Histopathologic examination showed diffuse spinal and meningeal infiltration with CD18(+) neoplastic cells, without any evidence of mass formation, which completed the diagnosis of diffuse leptomeningeal HS involving the brain and the spinal cord. Canine central nervous system (CNS) HS has been seldom reported in the literature, with only isolated cases identified on CSF cytology. The cases reported here are remarkable in describing a diffuse CNS leptomeningeal HS associated with neoplastic cells in the CSF of dogs without a tumor mass. These cases emphasize the potential critical importance of CSF analysis in providing an antemortem diagnosis of neoplasia in neurologic patients.
...
PMID:Diffuse leptomeningeal histiocytic sarcoma in the cerebrospinal fluid of 2 dogs. 2688 7
A 3-year-old, male neutered domestic shorthair cat, presented for acute onset tail
paresis
. He was diagnosed with a spindle cell tumour at the level of L7-
CD1
and treated with course fractionation radiation therapy. Three years following radiation therapy, the cat developed chondroblastic osteosarcoma of the pelvis, suspected to be secondary to radiation therapy. Hemipelvectomy was performed and the cat was treated with radiation therapy for remaining gross disease. The cat was euthanized 127 days post-operatively due to suspected metastatic disease. Development of radiation-induced tumours should be considered as a rare late complication in cats undergoing radiation therapy.
...
PMID:Suspected Radiation-Induced Osteosarcoma in a Domestic Shorthair Cat. 3197 21