Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Medicina (Kaunas) ; 59(4)2023 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37109764

ABSTRACT

Invasive forms of aspergillosis of the nervous system are relatively rare and are usually diagnosed in immunocompromised patients. We present the case of a young female patient, treated in the last two months with corticosteroids and antifungal drug for pulmonary aspergillosis, who developed progressive paraparesis. An intramedullary abscess at the C7-D1 level was identified and the lesion was treated with a combination of surgery and antifungal therapy. Histopathologic findings of surgical specimens showed myelomalacia with Aspergillus hyphae and a peripheral rim of neutrophils. We consider that the use of multiple drugs and corticosteroids for our patient's initial community pneumonia could be the factor that transformed her into a mildly immunocompromised individual and permitted the Aspergillus spp. to disseminate through the blood and into the spinal cord. Moreover, we highlight the fact that more attention should be paid to living and working conditions of the patients, as a simple colonization of the lung with Aspergillus spp. could develop, in a short time, into an invasive disease with a high risk of mortality.


Subject(s)
Abscess , Pneumonia , Humans , Female , Abscess/drug therapy , Abscess/etiology , Aspergillus fumigatus , Antifungal Agents/therapeutic use , Aspergillus , Spinal Cord , Pneumonia/drug therapy
2.
Rom J Morphol Embryol ; 60(2): 555-565, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31658329

ABSTRACT

AIM: The authors made a morphological evaluation of pleural tissue fragments from patients hospitalized in Thoracic Surgery Department of the Emergency County Hospital of Craiova, Romania, over a period of 26 years, diagnosed with tuberculous lesions in the Pathology Department of the same Hospital. PATIENTS, MATERIALS AND METHODS: The studied material consisted of pleural tissue samples taken by biopsy or surgical excision from 39 cases coming out of 841 patients investigated in the above-mentioned period of time and diagnosed from histological point of view with tuberculosis (TB). Granuloma cell population was assessed using immunohistochemical method. For diagnostic confirmation, Ziehl-Neelsen staining has been used as a rule but, in some cases, immunohistochemistry was also used. RESULTS: TB lesions predominated in men usually around or over 50 years old. The diagnostic was suspected in almost half of the cases. Right cavity was more affected and the extended fibrosis was present in a significant number of cases. The inflammatory conflict was of reactive type, with giant Langhans cells granulomas and acidophilic necrosis but sometimes with superinfection or significant fibrous sequelae. CONCLUSIONS: Pleural effusions of TB origin are a reality more and more present due to the recrudescence of pulmonary TB in the last decades. Their presence should be suspected if faced to a unilateral pleural effusion with free-flowing fluid occurred almost often to a man of any age from youth to elderly.


Subject(s)
Tuberculosis, Pleural , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
3.
Rom J Morphol Embryol ; 58(1): 287-291, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28523334

ABSTRACT

AIM: Doege-Potter syndrome is a rare condition consisting of a mesenchymal tumor, either benign or malignant, accompanied by severe hypoglycemia. The syndrome was first described independently by two American physicians, Karl Walter Doege (1867-1932) and Roy Pilling Potter (1879-1968), in 1930, but it was not before 1988 that it was associated with non-islet cell tumor production of insulin growth factor (IGF) that induces hypoglycemia as a paraneoplastic syndrome. CASE PRESENTATION: We present the case of a 61-year-old woman with severe hypoglycemia that induced seizures. On the general check-up, a massive tumor occupying the lower part of left hemi-thorax was discovered. Initially, corticosteroids, glucose i.v. and high carbohydrate diet managed to prevent the severe blood glucose drop. Surgery exposed a massive well-defined pleural tumor. After surgical removal, blood glucose stabilized. Histological examination confirmed the fibrous tumor that proved to be malignant on immunochemistry. DISCUSSION: The authors discuss other cases reported in the literature of this rare condition and its pathogenic mechanisms, the presented case being the first reported in Romania. CONCLUSIONS: The clinician should be aware of the possible existence of a pleural tumor in a patient presenting an unexplained hypoglycemia because the surgical removal of the tumor can solve the clinical manifestations.


Subject(s)
Congenital Abnormalities/diagnosis , Hypoglycemia/complications , Kidney Diseases/congenital , Kidney/abnormalities , Pleural Neoplasms/diagnosis , Pleural Neoplasms/pathology , Congenital Abnormalities/diagnostic imaging , Female , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Kidney/diagnostic imaging , Kidney Diseases/diagnosis , Kidney Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Middle Aged , Pleural Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Pleural Neoplasms/surgery , Radiography, Thoracic , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
4.
Rom J Morphol Embryol ; 56(3): 967-87, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26662129

ABSTRACT

AIM: The authors continue a started series of articles about extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) with the assessment of the mycobacterial lesions discovered on tissue samples of the oral cavity structures in the Department of Pathology of the Emergency County Hospital of Craiova, Romania, and the review of the cases reported in the literature available, between 1990 and 2013. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The studied material consisted, for our series, of samples obtained by biopsy or surgical excision, including the salivary glands and excluding the lymph nodes from 17 patients histopathologically diagnosed with tuberculosis and, for review series, 190 papers selected from PubMed database. RESULTS: The number of cases reported increased throughout the studied period. Most cases came from departments connected with oral pathology but also from various medical and surgical departments. In general, patients were adults with a mean age of around 40 years, with twice as many men than women, without no information or no clinical suspicion of tuberculosis (TB) at the admission. When reported, the provisional diagnostic was oriented most often towards neoplastic proliferation. There was no information about human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing in more than half of the case reports but when existed the result was two-fold more frequently negative than positive. TB lesions of the oral cavity were more often primary infections than secondary. From morphological point of view, the granuloma cellular population included both epithelioid and Langhans cells in most of the cases, the necrosis, present in most of the cases, displayed the whole range of morphological features, but mainly the acidophilic, microgranular one and the perilesional fibrosis was absent in almost all of the cases. As a whole, well-differentiated granulomas were the most frequent, usually of grade II - reactive type ("homeostatic") but with a significant contingent of grade I - hyperplastic ("protective") granulomas. Local extension was usually not present and, when present, regional lymph nodes were mainly involved. Coexistence of TB lesions with a neoplastic proliferation was very rare and when present it was mainly located in the parotid gland. Apart from this general profile, particular, individual profiles were observed for each of the oral cavity segments. CONCLUSIONS: TB lesions in the oral cavity are indeed a rare event but no swelling or ulcer in the oral cavity should be disregarded by the medical practitioners because it could be tuberculosis.


Subject(s)
Mouth/pathology , Tuberculosis/pathology , Adult , Age Distribution , Female , Geography , Granuloma/pathology , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , Publications , Time Factors , Tuberculosis/epidemiology , Ulcer/pathology , World Health Organization
5.
Rom J Morphol Embryol ; 56(4): 1423-8, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26743290

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Rapid diagnosis of malignancy during oncological surgery is crucial for making decisions related to the extension of the resection. The tissue prints, used initially for plant biology but also for prostate or breast cancer diagnosis, might be useful as a rapid cytological diagnosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Tissue prints were done from freshly sectioned excised tissue fragments in patients operated between March 2010 and February 2012 in the Department of Surgery for cancer or benign lesions. Tissue prints were examined by a cytologist and considered as malignant or benign. Same fragments were then processed in the pathology laboratory using the typical paraffin-embedding method. All slides were examined by the same pathologist and considered the golden standard for malignancy and histological type. RESULTS: Three hundred and eleven fragments were examined, obtained from lung masses, lymph nodes, pleura and mediastinal masses, pathology showed 208 malignant and 103 benign. Tissue prints identified 227 malignant and 84 benign. For identifying malignancy, tissue prints had a sensibility of 0.91, specificity 0.64. Positive predictive value was 0.86 and negative predictive value 0.78. For lymph nodes, the specificity was better. In lymphomas and adenocarcinomas, tissue prints identified also the histology type in most cases. CONCLUSIONS: Tissue prints are rapid, easy to perform, cheap, with high sensibility but specificity lower than literature data on frozen sections. This might be improved by a better selection of cases where tissue prints are used for rapid diagnosis.


Subject(s)
Cytological Techniques/methods , Lung Neoplasms/diagnosis , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Humans , Predictive Value of Tests , Sensitivity and Specificity
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...