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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 67-year-old patient has had exanthema in the lower right limb since 51 years ago (16 years old at onset), which underwent repeated remission and recurrence. At present, he has bilateral symmetrical widespread infiltrating exanthema and
asymmetrical
marked neuralhypertrophy, and has been diagnosed typical LLs (His father had the same disease). The exanthema recurred several years ago, and the patient is being treated for Hansen's disease. He had a dark brown flat elevation with a rough surface and the size of a small finger tip in his right abdominal skin for approximately 20 years. A biopsy was performed, and the specimen was fixed in 10% formalin and paraffin sections were prepared for histopathologic examination. A part of the specimen was processed forscanning electron microscopic examination. Seborrheic keratosis was diagnosed by H & E staining. Acid-fast (FITE) staining, immunohistochemical staining (keratin, S-100 protein, anti-
PGL
antibody and anti-BCG antibody) and scanning electron microscopy revealed the presence of bacteria (M. leprae) in the dermal foam cells, the matrix with a banded structure and the squamous epithelial cells which normally lack phagocytosis function. Compared to the basal cells of normal epidermis, the basal cells located adjacent to the dermis affected with seborrheic keratosis showed increased proliferation and more marked characteristics of a germinative cell. The degree of differentiation of the basal cells appeared regressed, and they probably possessed augmented phagocytic activity. The phagocytosed bacteria were probably carried by the epidermal cell cycle toward the surface layer. However, bacteria could not be found in the stratum corneum, probably due to an association with the lysosome.
...
PMID:[Intraepidermal mass of M. leprae in a case of seborrheic keratosis due to Hansen's disease (LLs)]. 858 83
The risk for bilateral tumors and long-term outcome after conservative cortical-sparing adrenal surgery was studied in a consecutive single-center series. One hundred fifty-four patients were operated on (1950-2004) for pheochromocytoma (PC=137), or abdominal
paraganglioma
(PG=17). Twenty had MEN 2 (16 MEN 2A; 4 MEN 2B), 15 von Recklinghausen's disease (VRD), and 1 von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease. Twelve patients had, or developed, bilateral adrenal medullary tumors; four with MEN 2A, four with MEN 2B, three with VRD, and one with probably hereditary PC associated with brain tumors/meningioma. Two patients with MEN 2B and one with MEN 2A with had bilateral adrenalectomy (adx). Three VRD patients, two MEN 2B and one MEN 2A patients had cortical-sparing surgery. Two patients were operated on unilaterally, but developed small contralateral tumors; one of these (MEN 2A) had a second asymptomatic PC diagnosed at an older age, so surgery was withheld; the other patient (hereditary PC syndrome) had a small contralateral PC diagnosed at autopsy 9 years later. Only three of nine patients with bilateral operations needed corticosteroid replacement after surgery. Four of six patients died of associated tumors (MTC and meningioma). The mean follow-up was 13 (1-25) years. Twelve MEN 2A patients with unilateral adx have been followed up for 20 (4-36) years without developing a second PC. Cortical-sparing adrenal surgery can safely be performed in the majority of patients with bilateral PC. On the basis of our long-term experience of MEN 2A we perform contralateral adrenal resection only if a second PC is confirmed. Five patients underwent adrenal exploration because of clinical and biochemical findings compatible with PC. Four had
asymmetrical
positive MIBG scans. They all underwent unilateral adx and diffuse medullary hyperplasia was confirmed (medullary weight estimated morphometrically to 1.0-3.4 g vs. normal weight 0.3-0.5 g in matched controls). These patients have been followed for 19 (5-27) years with normal clinical and biochemical findings. In this rare condition removal of the largest adrenal seems adequate.
...
PMID:Treatment of bilateral pheochromocytoma and adrenal medullary hyperplasia. 1710 11
Sporadic endolymphatic sac tumor is a very rare neoplasm. It is low malignant, locally destructive and expansive, but non-metastasizing. The tumor is very rare in the sporadic form, but more often associated with Von Hippel-Lindau disease. A 65-year old man with left sided tinnitus and hearing loss for several months. Audiometry showed an
asymmetrical
sensory neural hearing loss on the left side up to 60 dB. The speech discrimination score was 46% and stapedial reflexes were absent. Several years earlier, he had suffered from periods of dizziness. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a destructive and locally invasive tumor in the peripheral vestibular system expanding into the cerebellopontine angle.
Paraganglioma
and von Hippel-Lindau`s disease were excluded. Vestibular examination showed no function of vestibular organ left side. The tumor was resected radically by translabyrintine approach. Per-operative freeze-microscopy showed inflammation tissue, whereas subsequent microscopy showed papillary-cystic endolymphatic sac tumor. Endolymphatic sac tumor is a rare neoplasm. The tumor may present with asymmetrically sensory neural hearing loss with or without tinnitus, dizziness and facial nerve paresis. An MRI scan is the appropriate diagnostic tool final dianosis is made by the post-operative histo-pathology. Dizziness can be the first sign of a tumor in this area.
...
PMID:Sporadic Endolymphatic Sac Tumor-A Very Rare Cause of Hearing Loss, Tinnitus, and Dizziness. 2871 65