Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A precordial tumor of the pericardium was radiologically diagnosed as the cause of an untypical clinical picture of heart disease in a 41-year-old soldier. As the patient had an increased asbestos exposure due to his profession, he was admitted to operation under the tentative diagnosis of a pericardial mesothelioma and the question of an occupational disease (BK 4105). Microscopic and immunohistochemical findings are compatible with the diagnosis of a synovial sarcoma of the pericardium. The present immunohistochemical marker spectrum allowed a reliable differentiation between synovial sarcoma and pericardial mesothelioma, which is more frequent than synovial sarcoma. The epithelioid component was determined using the following antibodies: MNF 116, CK 19, CK 7, EMA and Ber EP-4 were positive while Factor VIII, Calretinin, S100, Vimentin, CEA, CD 31, bcl-2 and HBA-71 were negative. The sarcomatous component was determined with antibodies to Vimentin, bcl-2 and HBA-71 which were positive, and to MNF 116, CK 19, CK 7, Factor VIII, Calretinin, S100, EMA, CEA, Ber EP-4 and CD 31 which were negative. Synovial sarcomas of the pericardium in the lower anterior mediastinum or the myocardium are exceedingly rare. A causal relationship between tumor formation and an increased asbestos exposure--similar to the epidemiologically based experiences with pericardial mesothelioma--is not likely. Primary extrapericardial synovial sarcoma could be excluded.
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PMID:[Synovial sarcoma of the pericardium]. 988 9

A study to compare the immuno-histochemical profile of the human rete ovarii, and epoophoron, with the Fallopian tube and ovarian surface epithelium was performed with 31 antibodies and antisera. A reaction was present in the epithelial cytoplasm of the rete ovarii and epoophoron of mesonephric origin, for vimentin, GFAP, cytokeratin markers, (AE1/AE3, MNF116; Cam 5.2, 34 beta E12 and for the monospecific antibodies to cytokeratins 7 and 19), heat shock protein 27, in the cell membrane for HBME-1, EMA and in the subepithelial collagen for collagen IV. Reactions were present only in the epithelium in the rete ovarii for EGFR (one case) and CA-125 (four cases). A reaction was present in the epithelium of the epoophoron only for Ber-EP-4 and S100. There was no reaction with antibodies for desmin, neurofilament protein, cytokeratins 20 or 14, actin, calretinin, E-cadherin, C-erb-B2, or CEA (monoclonal and polyclonal reagents). The immuno-histochemical profile of the Fallopian tube was consistent with its para-mesonephric origin and that in the ovarian surface epithelium was consistent with a proposed modified mesothelial origin. This study provides an immunohistochemical profile of these structures with a large panel of commonly available antibodies and antisera, confirming and extending the findings described in previous studies.
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PMID:An immunohistochemical study of the rete ovarii and epoophoron. 1084 Aug 24

Adenocarcinoma of the rete testis is extremely rare and has been the subject of only sporadic case reports. Its natural history appears highly malignant even in localized forms; because of a poor response to adjuvant therapy radical orchiectomy with retroperitoneal lymph node dissection is recommended in stage A. We report our experience with two examples which arose in men of 26 and 57 years of age between 1988 and 1999. Both of them presented with a scrotal mass, and one of them had hydrocele. Neither had a history of maldescendent, infections or trauma. Microscopically the tumors were adenocarcinomas, and the one in the 26 years old patient presented with tubulopapillary formations. Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated positivity for CK and NSE in the 26 year old patient and only a weak positivity for CEA and vimentin in the 57 year old one. EMA and calretinin were always negative. Both were stage A but the young man who underwent radical orchiectomy with no lymph node dissection, developed a lymph node metastasis within one year.
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PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the rete testis. Report of two cases. 1143 50

Sixty cases of uterine adenomatoid tumors (ATs) are reported. All except four were incidental findings in hysterectomy specimens, three of these being discovered preoperatively as large multicystic tumors. ATs were classified into two distinctive macroscopic patterns: small, solid tumors and large, cystic ones. The 56 small, solid ATs ranged from 0.2 to 3.5 cm, (average 2.1 cm); 48 were nodular and 8 diffuse. The four large, cystic tumors ranged from 7 to 10 cm. Inflammation occurred in 65% of the tumors, and a smooth muscle reaction, identified by an increased Ki-67 index, was present in most cases. Both types were histologically similar except for the presence of short papillae in cystic tumors, which also showed serosal involvement. Both were immunoreactive for cytokeratins, calretinin, HMBE-1, and vimentin. Estrogen and progesterone nuclear receptors and EMA were negative. These tumors represent a spectrum ranging from small and solid to large and cystic ATs in the female genital tract, whereas outside the genital tract they are morphologically similar to multicystic mesothelioma. Although a reactive origin for ATs often seems plausible, especially when inflammation is present, their neoplastic nature should not be ignored.
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PMID:Adenomatoid tumors of the uterus: an analysis of 60 cases. 1206 80

Neoplasms of unknown origin present a difficult diagnostic dilemma, particularly if they are very poorly differentiated. Adenocarcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, melanomas, lymphomas, and sarcomas can all be very difficult to diagnose if the light microscopic cytomorphology is sufficiently undifferentiated. Electron microscopy (EM) can either demonstrate differentiation or narrow the range of differential diagnoses. The authors report the case of a 64-year-old male who has been HIV positive for several years and was found to have expansile lytic lesions in several ribs and a thumb fracture associated with a soft tissue mass which was biopsied. The tumor was composed of very pleomorphic malignant cells without specific differentiation. The malignant cells stained positive for pancytokeratin (AE 1/3), EMA, CEA, CK20, and CK7. Rare cells had mucicarmine-positive intracytoplasmic droplets. They were negative for S-100, calretinin, CD45, MART-1, and vimentin. EM revealed intracytoplasmic lumina with long microvilli and many well-formed desmosomal junctions. The diagnosis was initially very broad. Immunohistochemistry narrowed the diagnosis to carcinoma, but EM alone was able to narrow the diagnosis to poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. In a neoplasm of unknown origin, EM can either narrow the differential significantly or, in the case of limited material, provide information that otherwise may not be attainable.
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PMID:Desmosomes and microvilli mean a lot: diagnosis of neoplasms of unknown origin using electron microscopy. 1277 6

We present a 58-year-old woman who presented with a 1.5-cm, hypodense lesion in the head of the pancreas. Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration yielded bland, monotonous cells with wispy cytoplasm, slightly granular chromatin, and small nucleoli. A presumptive diagnosis of a neuroendocrine lesion was rendered. Whipple procedure yielded a well-circumscribed, encapsulated lesion with dense, hyalinized stroma and a peripheral rim of lymphocytes. Spindled and epithelioid cells formed short tubules, cords, and nests. The neoplasm stained for CK 5/6, calretinin, vimentin, CD 99, pancytokeratin, and EMA, consistent with mesothelial origin. This characteristic histology and immunohistochemistry is consistent with an adenomatoid tumor. We believe we are the first to report this benign neoplasm in such an unusual location. Herein we address the diagnosis of adenomatoid tumor by histology, immunohistochemistry, and aspiration cytology. Our case is particularly unique in that the histology and cytology are compared and correlated.
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PMID:Adenomatoid tumor of the pancreas: a case report with comparison of histology and aspiration cytology. 1280 68

Uterine tumors resembling ovarian sex-cord tumors (UTROSCTs) are unusual neoplasms with histologic features that resemble those within ovarian Sertoli and granulosa cell tumors. We report the case of a 24-year-old woman with a UTROSCT presenting as a cervical mass, which on initial evaluation was thought to represent cervical adenocarcinoma. The patient's cervical biopsy specimen contained epithelioid cells arranged in tubules and anastomosing cords, without significant cellular atypia or mitotic activity. Because this morphology elicited a broad differential diagnosis, immunohistochemical studies were performed. The tumor was found to be diffusely positive for cytokeratin cocktail, calretinin, and desmin, focally positive for CK7 and SMA, and negative for EMA, CEA, inhibin, CD10, CK20, chromogranin, and synaptophysin. Ultrastructural examination revealed occasional gland-like lumens with cells joined by desmosomes and a continuous basal lamina. UTROSCTs have features that may cause them to be confused with more common tumors, especially in limited biopsy samples, and should be included in the differential diagnosis when a gland-forming neoplasm with an unusual appearance is identified in a cervical or endometrial biopsy specimen.
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PMID:Uterine tumor resembling ovarian sex-cord tumor: report of a case mimicking cervical adenocarcinoma. 1281

We describe a peculiar pulmonary lesion, that we interpreted as a pseudopapillary variant of solitary fibrous tumor. The patient was a 62-year-old asymptomatic male, non smoking, presenting with a peripheral nodule, 0.8 cm across, located in the lower lobe of the right lung. The patient is alive and well 18 months after surgical excision of the nodule. Microscopically, the lesion was well-circumscribed and characterized by a diffuse pseudopapillary pattern. Pseudopapillae were large, and were covered by a rim of cubic epithelium devoid of atypia. The stromal axis was fibrous and contained scattered bland spindle cells. Immunohistochemically, the latter were strongly positive for vimentin and CD34, focally positive for BCL2 and CD99, negative for cytokeratin, EMA, TTF1, calretinin, smooth muscle actin, desmin and S100 protein; the epithelial cells were immunoreactive for cytokeratin, EMA and TTF1. We interpret this lesion as a peculiar pseudopapillary variant of solitary fibrous tumor, corresponding to what has been reported in the literature as pulmonary adenofibroma and fibroadenoma. The most important differential diagnostic considerations are briefly discussed.
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PMID:[Solitary fibrous pseudopapillary tumor of the lung: pulmonary fibroadenoma and adenofibroma revisited]. 1296 12

We describe a case of a poorly differentiated monophasic synovial sarcoma arising in the lung of a 50-year-old man. The tumor, which was located in the right upper lobe, was lobulated, relatively well-circumscribed, and whitish to yellowish in color. Microscopically, it was composed exclusively of ovoid to polygonal or short spindle cells, with a high nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio and relatively scant cytoplasm, arranged in solid sheets or in a hemangiopericytomatous pattern with intervening wiry collagen fibers. At the periphery of the tumor, entrapped benign alveolar epithelium produced a pseudo-biphasic appearance. In some areas, an abundance of keloidal collagen imparted a close resemblance to a solitary fibrous tumor, making it difficult to establish the diagnosis on the initial needle biopsy, although the malignant nature of the tumor was suggested because of nuclear anaplasia. Immunohistochemically, the tumor was positive for cytokeratin AE1/AE3, CAM5.2, EMA, vimentin, bcl-2 protein, calretinin, and CD34. The reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), using RNA extracted from fresh-frozen tissue, demonstrated SYT/SSX-1 fusion transcripts, confirming the diagnosis of synovial sarcoma. Microscopic examination demonstrated metastatic deposits in hilar lymph nodes. This case indicates that a primary pulmonary synovial sarcoma, particularly in its poorly differentiated form, is a diagnostically challenging and highly aggressive neoplasm typically found at an advanced stage.
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PMID:Primary poorly differentiated monophasic synovial sarcoma of the lung. A case report with immunohistochemical and genetic studies. 1864 80

In the literature, sufficient attention has not been paid to the precise subcellular localization of immunohistochemical signals, the knowledge of which is essential for proper interpretation of immunostains and distinction of genuine staining from biotin-associated or other nonspecific stainings. The subcellular localization of the signals can in fact be easily deduced from the known biologic or ultrastructural characteristics of the antigens. Extracellular antigens obviously are located in the extracellular compartment. Cellular antigens fall into 3 major groups: membranous, nuclear, and cytoplasmic. Membranous antigens include cell adhesion molecules (such as E-cadherin, N-CAM), cell surface/transmembrane receptors and proteins (such as tyrosine kinase receptors, most leukocyte antigens, CD10, CEA), and molecules linking surface molecules to cytoskeleton (such as beta-catenin, dystrophin). Nuclear antigens include cell cycle-associated proteins (such as cyclins, p16, Ki-67), nuclear enzymes (such as TdT), transcription factors (such as TTF-1, CDX-2, myogenin, PAX-5), tumor suppressor gene products (such as p53, p63, WT1, Rb), steroid hormone receptors (such as ER, PR), calcium-binding proteins (such as S-100 protein, calretinin), and some viral proteins (such as CMV, herpes). Cytoplasmic antigens can take up a granular pattern due to localization in organelles, granules, or secretory vesicles (such as chromogranin, hormones, lysozyme, HMB-45), fibrillary pattern attributable to the filamentous nature of the molecules (intermediate filaments and microfilaments), or diffuse or patchy pattern due to localization in the cytosol or large vesicles (such as myoglobin, albumin, thyroglobulin). Aberrant localization of the molecules, when present, can provide important insight into disease processes and aid in their diagnosis, such as loss of membranous E-cadherin expression in lobular breast carcinoma, aberrant nuclear localization of beta-catenin in colorectal adenocarcinoma, pattern of ALK staining in anaplastic large cell lymphoma correlating with the different types of chromosomal translocations, presence of additional cytoplasmic CD10 staining in the enterocytes indicative of microvillous inclusion disease, and "reversed" staining for EMA in micropapillary mammary carcinoma.
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PMID:Subcellular localization of immunohistochemical signals: knowledge of the ultrastructural or biologic features of the antigens helps predict the signal localization and proper interpretation of immunostains. 1530 32


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