Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06126 (CD1a)
2,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Inflammatory lesions of the hypophysis include lymphocytic hypophysitis, pituitary abscess, and granulomatous inflammation, with or without specific infections (i.e., sarcoidosis, mycobacteria). These lesions are known to mimic pituitary neoplasms. We report the clinical and pathologic findings in three patients who underwent transsphenoidal resection for presumed pituitary adenoma. Two were women aged 30 years (one with a 5-month history of headache, the other with a 1-year history of menstrual irregularity) and one was a 12-year-old girl with headache, nausea, and diabetes insipidus. Preoperative endocrinologic studies showed increased prolactin in one patient and normal serum thyroid stimulating hormone and prolactin levels in another. By magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the first case had a 1.2-cm mass with increased signal on T1 and isointensity on T2, ring enhancement after gadolinium, and lateral deviation of the pituitary stalk. The second patient had a 1.1-cm "cystic" mass seen during magnetic resonance imaging with adjacent bony changes seen during computed tomography. In the third, computed tomography showed a hypodense pituitary mass that enlarged during 1-month observation. At surgery, abnormal soft tissue surrounded liquefied material in the anterior pituitary in all cases. Histologic studies showed fragments of intact normal anterior pituitary with preserved vascular and reticulin network and regions of anterior pituitary infiltrated by foamy histiocytes. Other fragments resembled granulation tissue, and some consisted of acellular debris. Histiocytes were immunoreactive for the macrophage marker CD68 and negative for S-100 and CD1a. Ultrastructurally, the normal adenohypophysis was permeated by lipid-laden macrophages. There were no well-formed granulomas or giant cells, hemosiderin, acid-fast bacilli, or fungi. Serial sections and keratin immunostains failed to identify an epithelial cyst lining or keratin among the debris. We propose the term "xanthomatous hypophysitis" for this lesion.
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PMID:Xanthomatous hypophysitis. 963 Jan 81

A 26-year-old man presented with diabetes insipidus, sexual dysfunction and memory impairment. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and pathologic examination revealed Langerhans cell histiocytosis of the hypothalamus, which contained no eosinophils. The lesional cells were positive for S-100 protein and CD1a antigen, and negative for CD68 antigen. The possible pathogenesis, absence of eosinophils and prognosis are discussed.
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PMID:Hypothalamic Langerhans cell histiocytosis with no eosinophils. 1050 35

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare non-Langerhans' cell histiocytosis that may present with pulmonary symptoms. The condition seems to be nonfamilial and typically affects middle-aged adults. Radiographic and pathologic changes in the long bones are diagnostic, but patients often present with extraskeletal manifestations. Advanced pulmonary lesions are associated with extensive fibrosis that may lead to cardiorespiratory failure. The clinical, radiologic, and pathologic features of six patients with ECD with lung involvement are presented. The patients were three men and three women (mean age, 57). Five presented with progressive dyspnea, and one presented with diabetes insipidus. Open-lung biopsies showed histiocytic infiltrates in a lymphangitic pattern with associated fibrosis and lymphoplasmacytic inflammatory infiltrates. The histiocytes did not stain with periodic acid-Schiff. Immunoperoxidase studies performed on specimens from five of six patients showed that the histiocytes were positive for CD68 and Factor XIIIa and negative for CD1a. Specimens from two patients exhibited immunoreactivity for S-100 protein. Electron microscopy studies performed on specimens from two patients showed phagocytic lysosomes but no Birbeck granules. Clinical follow-up of up to 16 years was available. At the end of that time, five patients were dead of complications related to their disease; one patient remains alive 4 years after diagnosis but with severe respiratory compromise. ECD is a rare non-Langerhans' cell histiocytosis that may present as interstitial lung disease and resemble other pulmonary conditions, particularly usual interstitial pneumonitis and pulmonary Langerhans' cell histiocytosis. Recognition of this entity will allow better assessment of its true incidence, therapeutic options, and prognosis.
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PMID:Pulmonary pathology of Erdheim-Chester disease. 1091 34

Four cases of hypothalamic-pituitary Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) are reported, highlighting the expanding spectrum of clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features in adults. The diagnostic challenge of hypothalamic-pituitary LCH is emphasized in cases revealed as supra-sellar tumors with panhypopituitarism or as isolated central diabetes insipidus. Diagnosis is confirmed by histological examination showing infiltration with CD1a positive histiocytes. General guidelines for diagnosis procedure are drawn out, including the neurosurgical biopsy in particular cases.
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PMID:Hypothalamic-pituitary Langerhans cell histiocytosis: a diagnostic challenge. 1114 25

Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare illness, and the disease afflicting the thyroid gland is very uncommon, even in the presence of multisystem involvement. In this report, we document histologically, for the first time, concurrent involvement of the thyroid and parathyroid glands by LCH. A young Chinese woman with a history of diabetes insipidus and hypogonadism underwent a total thyroidectomy for enlarged thyroid gland secondary to LCH causing airway obstruction. Microscopic examination of the excised specimen disclosed CD1a- and S-100-positive LCH cells involving the thyroid and parathyroid glands. In a patient with LCH affecting the thyroid gland, parathyroid gland disease should be suspected when the serum calcium levels are depressed in association with an inappropriate serum parathyroid hormone level, such as a normal parathyroid hormone level in this case.
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PMID:Langerhans cell histiocytosis involving the thyroid and parathyroid glands. 1123 2

Thyroid involvement by Langerhans cell histiocytosis is rare. We report the case of a ten-year old boy who presented with a 5 cm goitre. He was treated for diabetes insipidus 14 months before. Thyroid isotopic scan showed hypoactivity of right lobe and revealed a cold left nodule. The patient was treated by right lobo-isthmectomy with adjuvant corticotherapy and chemotherapy (vinblastine). He is well with 12 months follow-up. Microscopic analysis demonstrated a diffuse infiltrate of thyroid parenchyma by sheets of CD1a positive Langerhans cells associated with lymphocyte foci. This case is remarkable by the abundance of Langerhans cells and scarcity of eosinophils. The diagnosis of thyroid langerhans cell histiocytosis should not be ignored in both children and adult patients.
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PMID:[Langerhans cell histiocytois of the thyroid: a rare disease not to be ignored]. 1193 98

We make a retrospective evaluation of clinical and radiologic features, treatment, and outcome of Erdheim-Chester disease, a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. We report a case of Erdheim-Chester disease and review 60 cases from the literature. These cases are consider to have Erdheim-Chester disease when they have either typical bone radiographs (symmetrical long bones osteosclerosis) and/or histologic criteria disclosing histiocytic infiltration with distinctive immunohistochemical phenotype of the non-Langerhans cell histiocytes with positive staining for CD68 and negative staining for S-100 protein and CD1a. Our patient undergoes chemiotherapy according to the LCH-II stratification and therapy plan (Vinblastine, Etoposide and Prednisone) and thereafter receives Carboplatin and Etoposide, and Somatostatin. She is alive and clinically well 33 months after onset of symptoms and the lesions don't appear to progress at imaging examinations. In conclusion, Erdheim-Chester disease may be confused with Langerhans cell histiocytosis as it sometimes shares the same clinical (exophthalmos, diabetes insipidus) or radiologic (osteolytic lesions) findings. However, the characteristics radiological pattern of Erdheim-Chester disease together the immunohistochemical phenotype of hystiocytic infiltration supports the theory that Erdheim-Chester disease is a unique disease entity distinct.
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PMID:[Erdheim-Chester disease: a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. A clinical-case and review of the literature]. 1534 69

We report 2 cases of Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) presenting as a thyroid mass. The first case is a 45-year-old woman with a 13-year history of diabetes insipidus who presented with an enlarging thyroid mass with substernal extension. The second case is a 29-year-old man who presented with an enlarging thyroid mass and skin lesions. Histologic evaluation of the thyroid gland in both cases revealed extensive involvement by LCH, confirmed by immunohistochemical analysis showing Langerhans cells that were positive for CD1a and S-100 protein. Langerhans cell histiocytosis can rarely involve the thyroid gland in adults, and we have identified 30 cases reported in literature. Most patients had evidence of LCH involving other anatomic sites, as was true in these 2 cases, and the diagnosis was initially established by examination of other sites in a subset of patients. Affected patients frequently have diabetes insipidus, as was true in case 1. Thyroid gland involvement as the initial presentation of LCH is a rare phenomenon that can result in misdiagnosis.
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PMID:Langerhans cell histiocytosis presenting as a thyroid gland mass. 1619 54

A 32-year-old Chinese woman presented for further investigation with a 6-year history of polyuria and polydipsia, a 4-year history of vulva ulceration and a 2-year history of gingival swelling. A biopsy of the vulva lesion showed diffuse infiltration of medium-sized cells with lobulated, grooved, vesicular nuclei. Occasional mitoses were present. The infiltrate of the cells showed reactivity with antibody to S-100 protein and CD1a, confirming the diagnosis of Langerhans' cell histiocytosis (LCH). Cephalic magnetic resonance imaging scanning revealed that an 8 x 7 x 8 mm3 large mass was located at the pituitary stalk. An X-ray film of the jaw showed sharply demarcated rarefaction of the right posterior portion of the mandible. In women with diabetes insipidus and genital ulcer, LCH should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Langerhans' cell histiocytosis with multisystem involvement in an adult. 1795 44

Juvenile xanthogranuloma (JXG) is generally a benign, self-limited histiocytic disorder of the skin. We report two cases of multisystem JXG presenting with clinical features more commonly seen in Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH), including diabetes insipidus and lytic bony lesions. Histologically, the skin lesions demonstrated a histiocytic dermal infiltrate that stained for CD-68, but S-100 and CD1a stains were negative. Treatment according to LCH-based chemotherapy regimens resulted in prompt resolution of symptoms. A literature review of multisystem JXG cases treated with chemotherapy suggests that symptomatic patients can successfully be treated with LCH-based regimens that include both corticosteroids and vinca alkaloids.
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PMID:Treatment of juvenile xanthogranuloma. 1833 95


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