Gene/Protein
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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (
EMA
)
2,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a clear cell hidradenoma on the cheek of a Japanese man. We performed the primary operation on the flesh-colored tumor, which had surface telangiectasia. The histopathologic features of the tumor, which indicated an intradermal nodular hidradenoma, consisted mainly of typical clear cells with small numbers of eosinophilic fusiform cells. Most clear cells reacted negatively for CEA,
EMA
, S-100 protein and KL-1 keratin, but those in and around the cystic and ductal structures reacted positively for CEA,
EMA
and KL-1 keratin. Ultrastructurally, these clear cells had numerous microvillus processes, abundant intracytoplasmic glycogen granules, and numerous mitochondria. In addition, buds of hyperpigmented keratinocytes hung from the overlying epidermis and thin cords of hyperpigmented keratinocytes proliferated around the follicular infundibula beside the tumor. Within two months of the primary operation, growth of the tumor into the overlying epidermis recurred rapidly. We discuss the histological features of the combination of clear cell hidradenoma with basaliomatous changes of the overlying and surrounding skin and the highly aggressive recurrence of this type of tumor after primary treatment.
J
Dermatol
1992 Jul
PMID:Clear cell hidradenoma: a tumor with basaliomatous changes in the overlying epidermis and follicular infundibula of surrounding skin. 132 38
The histological study of a painful cutaneous nodule located in the interscapular region, which had been present for 20 years in a 59-year old male patient has show typical features of dermal myxoma of the nerve sheaths. This was a lobulated myxomatous tumour with fusiform and dendritic cells plus a few epithelioid and multinucleate cells. Immunostaining was positive for the S100 protein and negative for factor XIIIa and
EMA
. These data suggest that this tumour was of schwannian origin.
Ann
Dermatol
Venereol 1992
PMID:[Dermal myxoma of nerve sheats (neurothecoma)]. 148 56
An asymptomatic tumor developed on the upper lip of a 63-year-old man. Histologically, the tumor contained glandular and cystic structures forming many branching lumina, and many scattered single cells in an abundant mucoid to chondroid stroma. The tumor was diagnosed as mixed tumor of the skin. Histochemically, the cells composing the tubular structures contained neutral mucopolysaccharides and the stroma, acid mucopolysaccharides. Immunohistochemically, the cells of the glandular and cystic structures showed epithelial and sweat gland differentiation (
EMA
-, CEA-, BRST-1- and BRST-2-positive), while the cells scattered in the stroma showed a tendency toward myoepithelial differentiation (S-100 protein- and vimentin-positive).
J
Dermatol
1991 Jul
PMID:An immunohistochemical study of mixed tumor of the skin. 172 53
Erosive adenomatosis of the nipple (also called florid papillomatosis of the nipple ducts) is an uncommon disease since only 358 cases have been published. We observed 10 cases in 10 years, corresponding to 1 case in 8,500 skin biopsies. One of these cases concerned a male patient and is the 13th of this kind in the literature. In our series the mean duration of symptoms was 15 months, as against 25 months in the 121 published cases where duration was clearly specified. In 8 of our 10 cases the patients consulted for oozing erosion or discharge of the nipple. Physical examination showed a palpable nodule in 2 cases, a small pediculate tumour in 1 case and nipple enlargement in 50 p. 100 of the cases. The patients were followed up for as much as 7 years. The outcome was always favourable. Recurrence was observed in only one patient, 7 months after limited excision; 6 years after a second excision no relapse was noted. Histological examination showed a papillomatous lesion in 5 cases, an adenomatous lesion in 2 cases and a mixed lesion in 3 cases. Myoepithelial cells were found in all cases, but they were doubtful or discreet in 4 cases. The apical pole of columnar cells was labelled by the ACE antibody, but labelling was very weak and partial in 4 cases. The columnar cell cytoplasm was constantly and strongly labelled by the KL1 anti-keratin antibody. The apical pole of parietal cells was strongly labelled by the antiepithelial membrane antigen antibody (
EMA
) in all cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Ann
Dermatol
Venereol 1990
PMID:[Erosive adenomatosis of the nipple. Report of 10 cases with immunohistochemistry]. 217 64
Sera from 24 patients with dermatitis herpetiformis and 80 control subjects (patients with other bullous diseases, nonbullous dermatoses, and noncutaneous diseases) were studied to determine the usefulness of assay for IgA antiendomysial antibodies (IgA-EMA) in the diagnosis of dermatitis herpetiformis. The overall sensitivity of IgA-
EMA
for the diagnosis of dermatitis herpetiformis was 79% and the specificity was 96%. When the three patients with dermatitis herpetiformis who were faithfully following gluten-free diets were excluded, the sensitivity was 90% and the specificity was 96%. No patient in the bullous disease control group (including patients with linear IgA bullous dermatosis) had circulating IgA-
EMA
. One patient, who did not have direct immunofluorescence evidence for dermatitis herpetiformis but had IgA nephropathy, had a positive IgA-
EMA
result, an interesting association in light of the rare reports of dermatitis herpetiformis in patients with IgA nephropathy and IgA antigliadin antibodies associated with IgA nephropathy. Although direct immunofluorescence testing of skin biopsy specimens remains the most definitive diagnostic test for dermatitis herpetiformis, indirect immunofluorescence assay of serum for IgA-
EMA
is a minimally invasive study with a high sensitivity and specificity for dermatitis herpetiformis.
J Am Acad
Dermatol
1989 Dec
PMID:IgA antiendomysial antibodies in dermatitis herpetiformis. 227 36
The pathogenesis of Stewart-Treves syndrome remains controversial: angiosarcoma or epithelial cell metastases from a mammary carcinoma? The case reported here, with clinical signs of Stewart-Treves syndrome on one side and mastectomy for carcinoma on the other side of the body, revives the debate. Case-history. The patient was an 89-year old woman whose left breast had been removed in June, 1981 for carcinoma with lymph node involvement. One year after the operation, multiple lymphadenopathy developed in her right armpit and subclavian region. In December, 1984, her right arm became swollen by lymphoedema, while Kaposi-like and nodular skin lesions appeared on her right upper chest and upper back and on her right shoulder and arm. Radiography of the chest showed right pleural effusion, bronchial lymph node enlargement and a reticulate image in the right lung. In spite of chemotherapy, the patient died in April, 1985. Pathology. Pathological examinations included standard histology (HPS, PAS and Gordon-Sweet staining), immunohistochemistry, using anti-factor VIII, anti-keratin KL1 and anti-
EMA
antisera, and electron microscopy. Results. Irrespective of the skin area biopsied, the histological images were always the same, showing carcinomatous lymphangitis with a varying degree of invasion of the surrounding dermis. Staining of the reticulum enhanced the vascular basal membranes but did not mark the intraluminal tumoral cell population. Post-mortem examination confirmed that the malignant lymphangitis extended to the lung tissue, the oesophageal wall and the adrenal glands, and that the axillary and subclavian lymph nodes were invaded by metastases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Ann
Dermatol
Venereol 1987
PMID:[Stewart-Treves pseudo-syndrome caused by cutaneo-lymphatic metastases of contralateral breast carcinoma]. 363 43
Histological, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural studies were performed on two cases of histologically unusual extramammary Paget's disease. Histologically, the central area of the lesions showed a bowenoid pattern, and the peripheral area showed typical extramammary Paget's disease. The transition zone showed an intermediate pattern. All these areas were positive for CEA and
EMA
, and negative for S-100 protein. Ultrastructurally, in the intermediate pattern, the tumour cells had abundant cytoplasmic glycogen, and the widened intercellular spaces contained numerous glycogen particles, which were probably secreted by the tumour cells. It is well known that eccrine glands, but not apocrine glands, secrete glycogen particles. Therefore, the present findings suggest that some cases of extramammary Paget's disease are a proliferation of germinative cells with eccrine gland differentiation.
Br J
Dermatol
1993 Feb
PMID:Ultrastructural study of extramammary Paget's disease--histologically showing transition from bowenoid pattern to Paget's disease pattern. 838 71
Although no animal is a perfect skin model for the study of toxicological and therapeutic agents, structurally the pig may be superior to even non-human primates. Because our work involves effects of toxicological and therapeutic agents on the skin, we wanted to identify stains which may prove useful as well as determine cross-reactivity of some newer antihuman antibodies. We performed a battery of formalin-fixed skin from weanling pigs and minipigs. The battery of antibodies included LCA, CD3, OPD-4, CD34, UCHL-1, L-26, KP-1, MAC-387, Factor XIIIa, Leu-7, S-100 protein, HMB-45, GFAP, synaptophysin, neurofilament protein, ubiquitin, vimentin, type IV collagen, laminin, fibronectin, Factor VIII related antigen, Desmin-M, smooth muscle actin, cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 20, AEI/AE3, CAM 5.2,
EMA
, GCDFP, Ki-67, and PCNA. Immunohistochemical stains for CD3, Leu-7, S-100 protein, type IV collagen, laminin, Factor VIII related antigen, GFAP, synaptophysin, neurofilament protein, ubiquitin, smooth muscle actin, vimentin, Desmin-M, cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 20, AE1/AE3, CAM 5.2, Ki-67 and PCNA showed consistent cross-reactivity. In formalin-fixed tissue, only antibodies to lymphoreticular cells showed poor cross-reactivity. A high percentage of the remaining antibodies did show good cross-reactivity but with some interesting similarities and differences in specificity.
J
Dermatol
Sci 1998 Sep
PMID:Sensitivity of cross-reacting antihuman antibodies in formalin-fixed porcine skin: including antibodies to proliferation antigens and cytokeratins with specificity in the skin. 974 58
A 56-year-old man presented with a subcutaneous mass adjacent to the sternoclavicular joint region, which had predominant spindle-shaped myoepithelial cells and a small number of tubular or trabecular epithelial cells that resembled eccrine differentiation under a light microscope. Immunohistochemical studies showed positive staining for muscle-specific actin and vimentin in the myoepithelial cells, but staining was negative for S-100 protein and keratin. The tubular and trabecular epithelial cells stained positively for keratin,
EMA
and CEA. We believe that this rare tumor had the potential for biphasic differentiation and should be differentiated from other biphasic differentiated or mixed tumors in this site. Immunohistochemical staining was useful for diagnosis and differential diagnosis.
J
Dermatol
1999 May
PMID:Sweat gland adenoma with predominant myoepithelial differentiated features: case report and immunohistochemical study. 1038 Apr 33
We report a case of cellular neurothekeoma showing unusual immunohistochemical findings and occurring on the left upper arm of a healthy 48-year-old woman. She presented with a 1 cm, red, asymptomatic, dermal nodule of 1 year duration. A biopsy showed dermal proliferation of plexiform fascicles of spindle-shaped or polygonal cells with plentiful eosinophilic cytoplasms. The immunohistochemical profile included negative stains for S-100, CD34, factor XIIIa, CD68, HMB45, cytokeratins, and
EMA
, strongly positive stains for neuron specific enolase (NSE), synaptophysin, and chromogranin A, and focally positive ones for NKI/C3 and alpha-smooth muscle actin. Ultrastructural analysis showed undifferentiated mesenchymal cells with cytoplasmic projections and abundant RER. Although we couldn't find any confirmative cell type in this cellular tumor, we believe that cellular neurothekeoma is predominantly composed of undifferentiated cells that can exhibit features of neuroendocrine cells in addition to fibroblastic or myofibroblastic ones, suggesting a divergent cell origin.
J
Dermatol
1999 Jun
PMID:Cellular neurothekeoma with possible neuroendocrine differentiation. 1040 81
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