Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (vasculitis)
20,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The expression of an epidermal keratin subunit and a specific antigen of the keratinocyte membrane, two differentiation antigens in normal human epidermis, was studied in benign and malignant epidermal lesions by use of monoclonal antibodies KL1 (anti 55-57 Kd keratins) and KL3 (anti keratinocyte membrane antigen). In normal human epidermis, KL1 labelled all keratinocytes from the suprabasal layers, KL3 stained the intercellular spaces in all epidermal layers with a fluorescence intensity increasing from the basal to the more upper layers and recognized a keratinocyte membrane antigen as demonstrated in electron microscopy. Frozen or deparaffinized sections of basal cell carcinomas (BCC), squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) malignant melanomas, warts, and skin biopsies from benign lesions (psoriasis, lichen planus, bullous pemphigoid, lupus erythematodes, pemphigus, vasculitis) were tested with either KL1 or KL3 by indirect immunofluorescence and/or immunoperoxidase. Benign and malignant lesions in which modifications of the keratinization process and cell differentiation are known to occur (BCC, SCC, warts, psoriasis) showed the most severe alterations as compared to normal epidermis. With KL1 we observed an irregular staining of basal cells; a reorganization of keratin filaments and variable staining intensities within tumoral cells which did not express high MW keratins. With KL3 drastic alterations in the epidermal intercellular patterns and loss of reactivity of tumoral cells were noted. Conversely, the positivity of epidermal basal cells with KL1, in some cases, was the only modification noted in other skin lesions.
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PMID:Alterations in the expression of two epidermal differentiation antigens in human epidermal disorders. 242 Dec 76

Scleroma was diagnosed in nine of 30 Spanish-surnamed patients who had inflammatory lesions of the nose, pharynx, and larynx during the two-year period from Jan 1, 1978, through Dec 31, 1979. A total of 19 biopsy specimens were taken from these nine patients. In six of the 19 specimens, a histologic diagnosis of scleroma was not possible. Seventeen of the specimens with characteristic histologic findings stained with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method for detection of Klebsiella capsular antigen III, although in 11 of these specimens, simultaneous cultures failed to reveal the characteristic Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis. These specimens showed the features of one of the three histopathologic forms of scleroma: ozena, granuloma, or scleroma. A range of tissue reactions was identified: histiocyte and plasma cell nodules, vasculitis, acute inflammation, pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia, ulceration, and submucosal keratin cyst. Comparison with histochemical bacterial stains revealed that the PAS and Hotchkiss-McManus stains gave unequivocal positive results less frequently than the immunoperoxidase method, and were less specific. Methenamine silver, Giemsa, Deiterle, Brown and Brenn, and Brown and Hopps were unreliable for the detection of the organism. The immunoperoxidase method can be appropriately used when the spectrum of histopathologic findings suggests a differential diagnosis of scleroma.
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PMID:Scleroma (Rhinoscleroma). A histologic immunohistochemical study with bacteriologic correlates. 619 Apr 63

We report six cases of hyperplastic mesothelial cells located in the sinuses of lymph nodes. All patients but one had a concurrent serosal fluid collection (two pericardial, two pleural, one abdominal) at the time of the lymph node biopsy. All effusions cleared with treatment of the underlying disorder, which included lymphoproliferative processes, congestive heart failure, and inflammatory diseases (Dressler syndrome, vasculitis, and glomerulonephritis). Four cases were associated with vascular prominence of the involved nodal sinuses, a feature that may reflect the cause of the underlying effusion or support the transient persistence of benign mesothelial cells in lymph nodes. Two cases were characterized by distention of the nodal sinuses by sheets of mitotically active mesothelial cells. The differential diagnosis includes metastatic carcinoma, keratin-positive dendritic cells native to lymph nodes, and metastatic malignant mesothelioma. Because the latter shares both clinical and morphological features with cases of benign mesothelial cells in lymph nodes, we believe that this distinction may not always be possible in a given biopsy specimen and therefore that careful clinical follow-up is required in such cases.
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PMID:Hyperplastic mesothelial cells in lymph nodes: report of six cases of a benign process that can stimulate metastatic involvement by mesothelioma or carcinoma. 956 82