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Query: UMLS:C0149521 (
chronic pancreatitis
)
7,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic pancreatitis
(CP) is characterized by mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltration and replacement of the destroyed parenchyma by fibrous tissue. Recently, mast cells have been implicated in chronic inflammatory processes with fibrous tissue deposition. Therefore, the number and distribution of mast cells and their state of activation were evaluated in 12 normal specimens and in 46 specimens of CP with different causes (alcoholic, tropical, and idiopathic). Furthermore, the presence of stem cell factor (SCF), the main mast cell growth factor, and of its receptor,
c-kit
, was also assessed. In CP tissues, mast cells were localized both in the fibrotic areas and in the residual acinar parenchyma. The total number of mast cells was significantly higher in CP than in the normal pancreas (P < .0001) and correlated positively with the extent of fibrosis and the intensity of inflammation. Immunoglobulin E (IgE)-dependent mast cell activation was higher in CP than in the normal pancreas. No differences in mast cell number or IgE positivity were found among the 3 causes of CP. SCF-and
c-kit
immunoreactive mast cells were mostly localized in fibrous tissue and around regenerating ducts, which were also positive for
c-kit
but were negative for SCF. These results suggest that mast cells, activated by an IgE-dependent mechanism and/or by an SCF-
c-kit
autocrine loop, are a relevant component of the inflammatory infiltrate in CP, independent of the underlying cause. Their localization near degenerating acini and regenerating ducts might indicate that they play a crucial role in tissue destruction and remodeling in CP.
...
PMID:Mast cell distribution and activation in chronic pancreatitis. 1172 55
Pancreatic hamartoma is a rare tumor, and its characteristic histopathologic features have not yet been fully evaluated. In this study, we collected 9 cases of pancreatic hamartoma to elucidate distinctive histopathologic features that can serve to establish this tumor as a clear disease entity and thus formulate useful histopathologic criteria for this tumor. The cases comprised 4 men and 5 women with a mean age of 62.7 years. The average tumor diameter was 3.3 cm. All patients underwent surgical treatment, and none showed any recurrence postoperatively. Macroscopically, pancreatic hamartomas were well-demarcated tumors with a solid or solid and cystic appearance. Microscopically, these tumors comprised mature acini and small-sized to medium-sized ducts showing a distorted architecture with various amounts of fibrous stroma. Strikingly, the tumors consistently lacked concentric elastic fibers in their duct walls, peripheral nerves, and well-formed islets of Langerhans, all of which exist in both the normal and atrophic pancreas. Immunohistochemically, scattered chromogranin A-positive neuroendocrine cells were observed in the acinar and ductal components. Ductal components were positive for S-100 protein. Spindle-shaped stromal cells expressed CD34 and/or
c-kit
. These histopathologic features were distinct from those of 5 cases of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, 3 cases of type 1 autoimmune pancreatitis (lymphoplasmacytic sclerosing pancreatitis), 3 cases of alcoholic
chronic pancreatitis
, and 5 cases of normal pancreas. In conclusion, pancreatic hamartomas share some distinctive histopathologic features and clinical outcomes (neither recurrence nor metastasis) that allow them to be interpreted as malformative lesions. The term "hamartoma" is appropriate for these unique lesions.
...
PMID:Distinctive histopathologic findings of pancreatic hamartomas suggesting their "hamartomatous" nature: a study of 9 cases. 2371 57