Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mucosal prolapse syndrome comprises a variety of clinical and histopathological entities, with mucosal prolapse as the underlying pathogenic mechanism. Due to variable clinical, endoscopic and histopathological presentation and rareness of symptomatic mucosal prolapse, misdiagnosis resulting in delayed or inappropriate treatment is frequent. This report describes a patient initially diagnosed with a colorectal polyposis syndrome consisting of multiple rectal hyperplastic and adenomatous polyps. But after careful review of medical history and histopathology, the patient was found to have a rare variant of solitary rectal ulcer syndrome presenting as rectal polyposis. The recognition of rectal polyposis as a manifestation of solitary rectal ulcer syndrome/mucosal prolapse syndrome will improve diagnosis and treatment and prevent inappropriate management of this condition.
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PMID:Mucosal prolapse syndrome presenting as rectal polyposis. 1986 63

Mucosal prolapse syndrome (MPS) has been recognized as a chronic benign inflammatory disorder, characterized mainly by rectal mucosal prolapse. Disorders representing this condition include solitary rectal ulcer syndrome (SRUS), rectal prolapse, proctitis cystica profunda, and inflammatory cap polyps. The gross appearance of rectal MPS can be occasionally misinterpreted as rectal cancer. In contrast, there have been a few reports of colorectal cancer originating from prolapsed mucosa. Herein, we report a case of MPS associated with two independent rectal cancers extending into the submucosal layer. We speculate that long-standing MPS may increase the risk of malignant transformation.
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PMID:A case of rectal cancer arising from long-standing prolapsed mucosa of the rectum. 2204 58

The author investigated histopathology of 1,438 consecutive rectal specimens in the last 10 years of our pathology laboratory in Japan. A computer review of pathologic reports was done. Observations of pathologic slides were performed, when appropriate. The rectal specimens were composed of 1,022 benign lesions and 416 malignant lesions. The 1,022 benign lesions were composed non-specific proctitis (n=460, 45%), adenoma (n=248, 24%), ulcerative colitis (n=98, 10%), hyperplastic polyp (n=54, 5%), carcinoma in adenoma (n=40, 4%), rectal ulcer (n=37, 4%), serrated adenoma (n=24, 2%), hyperplastic nodule (n=21, 2%), Crohn's disease (n=9, 1%), ischemic proctitis (n=8, 0.8%), mucosal prolapse syndrome (n=7, 0.6%), juvenile polyp (n=6, 0.6%), lymphoid hyperplasia (n=5, 0.5%), lipoma (n=4, 0.4%) and amebic dysentery (n=2, 0.2%), and mature cystic teratoma (n=1, 0.1%). In this article, histopathological features of these benign lesions were described in details. In particular, adenomas were classified into adenomas with mild, moderate, and severe atypia, serrated adenoma, and carcinoma in adenoma. The later are mainly seen in large adenoma with severe atypia. Ulcerative colitis was characterized by continuous lesion, crypt abscess, abnormal branching, and deletion of goblet cells. Crohn's disease was characterized by transmural inflammation and epithelioid granulomas. Ischemic colitis was characterized by ischemic necrotic changes and pseudomembrane formation. Mucosal prolapse syndrome was characterized by abnormal muscle in the mucosa (fibromuscular obliterance). Juvenile polyp was characterized by abnormal dilations of the crypts. Lymphoid hyperplasia must be differentiated from MALT lymphoma. Lipoma was ordinary lipoma without lipoblasts. Amebic dysentery was characterized by ulcer and presence of histiocyte-like entamoeba histolitica. Mature cystic teratoma was characterized by hairs and other elements of skin and mesodermal and endodermal components.
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PMID:Histopathologic study of the rectum in 1,438 consecutive rectal specimens in a single Japanese hospital: I. benign lesions. 2341 70