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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (B-cell lymphoma)
16,671 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lymph node and peripheral blood lymphocytes were studied simultaneously for surface markers of T and B cells in 22 patients with lymphoproliferative diseases and 8 patients with non-neoplastic lymphadenopathy. This resulted in the classification of the malignancy from involved lymph nodes into 4 groups. Six patients had B cell lymphomata with normal or strong immunofluorescent staining for surface membrane immunoglobulin; 8 patients had B cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia with pale staining for surface membrane immunoglobulin; 5 patients had T cell lymphomata and 3 patients were not definitely classifiable. In 6 out of 8 patients with B cell CLL, histopathology of lymph nodes showed infiltration with well differentiated lymphocytes and in all T cell lymphomata, the infiltrating cells were poorly differentiated. By the use of these markers, malignant lymphocytes were identified in the circulation in only 3 out of 6 patients with B cell lymphoma, in all patients with B cell CLL but in none of those with T cell lymphoma or unclassifiable lymphoma. Therefore a more conclusive characterization of the malignant lymphocyte in lymphoproliferative diseases must include an examination of involved lymph nodes.
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PMID:T and B cell populations in blood and lymph node in lymphoproliferative disease. 108 Apr 24

A case of B cell lymphoma with clinical and histological features of malignant histiocytosis was described. A 57-year-old male was admitted to Shinshu University Hospital because of transverse myelopathy. Five months before admission, he noticed urinary disturbance, which progressed to urinary obstruction. The following month, bilateral muscular weakness appeared in his legs. A few days later he could not stand up, and was admitted to a local hospital. Neurological examination revealed sensory disturbances below the level of Th12 in all modalities, and marked weakness and hyperreflexia in the lower limbs. A spinal tumor was suspected. However, myelography showed no abnormality. The patient's condition worsened and he became bed-ridden in February 1990. He was transferred to Shinshu University Hospital for further evaluation. On admission he was poorly nourished with fever, anemia, hepatomegaly, and bilateral pretibial pitting edema. No lymphadenopathy was observed. Neurological examination showed total sensory loss below the level of Th12, spastic paraplegia, hyperreflexia in the legs, and urinary obstruction. Laboratory findings revealed an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, increased CRP, pancytopenia, and hypoalbuminemia. Serum level of IgG, IgA, IgM, LDH, ALP, GPT and total bilirubin were increased. CSF and MRI imaging of the spinal cord were normal. Proliferation of atypical histiocytes with marked erythrophagocytosis, which is a characteristic pathological feature of malignant histiocytosis, was observed in peripheral blood and aspirated bone marrow. Immunoenzyme staining of bone marrow using monoclonal antibody L-26, which is a B-cell marker, revealed B-cell lymphoma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of B-cell lymphoma with clinical and histological features of malignant histiocytosis]. 130 24

Hypercalcemia occurred in a patient with non-Hodgkin's (B-cell type) lymphoma when generalized lymphadenopathy developed. Despite low normal plasma parathyroid hormone (PTH), nephrogenous cAMP (NcAMP) was not suppressed, and serum and urine PTH-related protein (PTH-rP) levels were elevated. The plasma level of 1,25(OH)2D was within normal range. The combined chemotherapies successfully reduced the tumor size, serum Ca, PTH-rP, and lactic dehydrogenase. Serum osteocalcin was suppressed while the patient was hypercalcemic, and increased after chemotherapy. In the extract of the tumor tissue obtained post mortem, bioactivity stimulating the production of cAMP in osteoblasts was demonstrated along with the immunoreactive PTH-rP. This is the first report of a B-cell lymphoma producing PTH-rP and its association with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone-related protein as a cause of hypercalcemia in a B-cell type malignant lymphoma. 133 5

Fifteen endoscopic gastric biopsies (GBx) from 12 patients with small lymphocytic infiltrates morphologically raising a differential of indeterminate lymphocytic infiltrate versus mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma were analyzed genotypically after frozen-section identification of the abnormal lymphocytic infiltrate. Frozen-section immunoperoxidase immunophenotyping was equivocal in each case. All patients had abdominal pain attributable to superficial gastric ulceration, most often antral, without peripheral lymphadenopathy or hepatosplenomegaly. Rearrangement of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene (JH-R, seven patients) or kappa light-chain gene (JK-R, eight patients), was found in eight GBx from eight (seven stage IAE; one stage IBE) of 12 patients, establishing, in conjunction with the histologic features, a diagnosis of low-grade B-cell lymphoma. This diagnosis had not been tenable on multiple prior GBx, ranging from one to five per patient, over intervals of 1 month to 6.5 years (median 4.5 months). The T-cell receptor beta-chain gene retained germline configuration in all cases. Insufficient DNA for molecular studies was extracted from the GBx of two patients, one with JK-R (JH-G) on subsequent GBx and one without further GBx. One patient had two GBx, each demonstrating a single additional band in HindIII digests hybridized with the JH probe. No rearrangements were detected in either the BamHI or the EcoRI digests. Uninvolved tissue from this patient was not available for the exclusion of restriction fragment length polymorphism. Three GBx (two patients) showed germline JH genes (JH-G). One had a partial gastrectomy (histology: MALT lymphoma) in 1981 followed by GBx in 1983 (histologically benign) and in 1990 (JH-G), and negative esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) in 1991 without biopsy. The other patient (two GBx with JH-G) had multiple subsequent abnormal EGD, but no biopsies since December 18, 1990. Adequate DNA for gene rearrangement studies can be extracted from GBx samples weighing as little as 20 mg. The two samples with insufficient DNA weighed 1 and 16 mg, respectively. Practically speaking, the remainder of a frozen block from a single GBx is adequate, thus allowing the screening of multiple endoscopic GBx by sequential frozen sections to determine which one contains the most extensive lymphocytic infiltrate for molecular study. Consistent results are obtained on samples weighing 40 to 60 mg. This method is a suitable alternative to kappa/lambda frozen-section immunoperoxidase immunostaining, which can be uninterpretable on endoscopic biopsies or small biopsies from other sites.
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PMID:Practicality of molecular studies to evaluate small lymphocytic proliferations in endoscopic gastric biopsies. 135 96

We studied 23 cases of angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy (AILD) and AILD-like lymphoma for evidence of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and in situ hybridization studies. EBV nucleic acid sequences were found by either PCR or in situ hybridization in 96% of the cases. There was a wide range in the number of EBV-positive cells among the different cases as detected by in situ hybridization. The EBV-positive cells most often possessed nuclei of intermediate to large size. Double-labeling immunohistochemistry/in situ hybridization studies demonstrated that most of the EBV-positive cells expressed the B-lineage antigen CD20 (as detected by L26), with a minority of the EBV-positive cells stained for the T-lineage associated antigen, CD43 (as detected by Leu 22). The abnormally high amounts of EBV found in AILD and AILD-like lymphoma may be a reflection of decreased immunocompetence in these patients. The presence of EBV-positive B cells may explain the presence of B-cell clones found by others as well as the paradoxical occurrence of B-cell lymphoma in a primary T-cell lymphoproliferative disorder.
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PMID:Detection and localization of Epstein-Barr viral genomes in angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy and angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy-like lymphoma. 137 88

Two cases of renal lymphoma were reported. Case 1 was a 73-year-old, and case 2 was a 59-year-old female. Their chief complaint was flank pain. The findings obtained by CT and angiography were not compatible with renal cancer. The tentative diagnosis of case 1 was inflammatory disease or soft tissue tumor, and that of case 2 was renal subcapsular tumor. Histological specimen was obtained by open biopsy from case 1, and by nephrectomy from case 2. Immunohistochemical surface marker study revealed both tumors were B cell lymphoma. Chemotherapy (CHOP-Bleo, or PPA) in both cases and additional radiotherapy in case 2 markedly reduced the tumor size. Nevertheless, case 1 died 5 months later from recurrence, and case 2 died 14 months later of gastrointestinal bleeding. At autopsy, the renal subcapsular layer was infiltrated by lymphoma cells in both cases, and lymphadenopathy was not observed. Reviewing 16 cases previously reported as renal lymphoma, the capsular or subcapsular diffuse infiltration to the kidney is considered to be a characteristic feature of renal lymphoma.
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PMID:[Renal lymphoma. Report of 2 cases and review of the literature]. 143 94

A 38-year-old man with diffuse endobronchial infiltration with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) is reported. He was admitted to our hospital on November 1990 because of lymph node swelling. Physical examination on admission revealed left axillary, bilateral cervical and inguinal lymph node swelling. Chest and abdominal CT scan showed para-aorta lymph node swelling, mild splenomegaly and heterogeneous density of the liver, although hilar and mediastinal lymphadenopathy were not found. Microscopic examination of the biopsy specimen obtained from the right inguinal lymph node and liver revealed NHL (B cell lymphoma, diffuse, mixed type). After two courses of chemotherapy, a chest roentgenogram showed bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy and reticular shadows. CT scan demonstrated a thickening of the left main bronchus. Bronchoscopic examination revealed a small submucosal nodule in the left main bronchus on February 1991, from which the biopsy specimen revealed NHL infiltration similar to that of the lymph node. At follow-up bronchoscopic examination, in spite of chemotherapy, scattered NHL infiltration was found in the submucosal space of the left vocal cord, carina and the bifurcation between left upper and lower bronchi. In patients with NHL, endobronchial involvement is rare. In this case, diffuse endobronchial infiltration was not thought to be direct invasion from the lymph node but hematogenous or lymphatic spread to the bronchi.
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PMID:[A case of diffuse endobronchial infiltration in a patient with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma]. 162 90

A 70-year-old man was admitted to our hospital on March 9, 1989 because of fever, superficial generalized lymphadenopathy, upper abdominal mass and right pleural effusion. The diagnosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (follicular medium sized cell type, B cell) was made by a biopsy of the neck lymph node. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were obtained from the patient by cytopheresis. The cells were cultured for 8 days with interleukin-2 (IL-2) to generate Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells. The patient received a total of 7.7 x 10(9) LAK cells intravenously over a period of 3 weeks. He also received continuous intravenous infusion of IL-2 for 17 days, starting 2 days before the first infusion of LAK cells. After this therapy, although his superficial generalized lymphadenopathy disappeared or decreased in size, the size of the upper abdominal mass did not decrease. Therefore, it is suggested that adoptive immunotherapy is a beneficial treatments for B cell lymphoma. However, LAK cells should be generated in much larger quantities for a more successful therapeutic result.
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PMID:[Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and interleukin-2 (IL-2) therapy that improved lymphadenopathy in a patient with B cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma]. 163 70

Clinical and pathologic features of 24 patients with large cell lymphomas that expressed the activation antigen Ki-1 are described. Phenotypic and/or genotypic studies characterized these neoplasms as T-cell (16 cases), B-cell (six cases), or null cell (two cases) type. Males predominantly were affected. Age of patients ranged from 19 to 73 years, with a bimodal distribution, with peaks in the third and seventh decades. Lymphadenopathy was present in nearly all patients. Extranodal involvement, including skin, soft tissue, bone, central nervous system, lung, or small intestine was observed in a total of 54% of the patients, either at presentation or during the course of disease. "Prototypic" features of large cell anaplastic lymphomas were observed for eight T-cell lymphomas, with morphologic heterogeneity noted for the remainder. Eight patients, all with T-cell neoplasms (only one with prototypic morphology), have died of lymphoma (median survival, 5 months). An antecedent history of a lymphoproliferative disorder (mycosis fungoides, B-cell lymphoma, immunoblastic lymphadenopathy) was apparent in seven patients. An 8-year history of Crohn's disease occurred in one patient with a T-cell lymphoma involving small intestine. Phenotypically, loss of one or more markers was typically noted for T-cell neoplasms. Leukocyte common antigen was detected in all cases, although partial loss of immunoreactivity was noticed in some cases. Nearly all cases evaluated for Ia antigen or alpha-1-antichymotrysin were reactive. Eleven of 16 T-cell, two of six B-cell, and two null cell lymphomas expressed epithelial membrane antigen. Ki-1-positive large cell lymphomas are characterized by clinical, morphologic, and immunophenotypic heterogeneity.
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PMID:Ki-1-positive large cell lymphomas, a heterogenous group of neoplasms. Morphologic, immunophenotypic, genotypic, and clinical features of 24 cases. 164 95

A 60-year-old woman complaining of cervical lymphadenopathy was admitted to Keiyu General Hospital, Yokohama. Malignant lymphoma involving systemic lymph nodes and the bilateral tonsils was suspected by computed tomography. The biopsy diagnosis of the cervical lymph nodes was B-cell lymphoma, diffuse medium-sized cell type. The cleaved centrocytic lymphoma cells were immunoreactive for CD20 and CD22 but negative for immunoglobulins. Characteristically, a considerable number of neoplastic lymphocytes possessed eosinophilic round inclusions in the cytoplasm. The inclusions were green in color by Papanicolaou staining, whereas they appeared vacuole-like in Giemsa-stained preparations. Ultrastructural study confirmed the presence of aggregates of intermediate-sized filamentous structures mainly in the perinuclear area. The rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus were poorly developed. Immunocytochemical staining using cytologic specimens and fresh-frozen sections disclosed that the inclusions were composed of vimentin filaments. Morphologic similarities to signet ring cell lymphoma are discussed.
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PMID:B-cell lymphoma with vimentin-positive cytoplasmic inclusions. 171 43


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