Two autopsy cases of fulminant myocarditis demonstrating uncommon morphology were studied. Subjects included two male patients: a 42-year-old (case 1) and a 39-year-old (case 2). Both cases had fever, chest or epigastric pain, electrocardiographic abnormalities, prominent elevation of serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, glutamic pyruvic transaminase, lactic dehydrogenase and creatine phosphokinase. They were treated with intra-aortic balloon pumping and percutaneous cardiopulmonary support, and they died at 3 days and 4 days after admission (total course of 10 days and 9 days), respectively. Case 1 showed focal necrosis, severe myocardial dystrophic calcification positive for Kossa stain, inflammatory edema, lymphocyte and macrophage infiltration and extravasation of erythrocytes. Case 2 showed acute inflammation and severe myocardial necrosis with neutrophilic abscess, lymphocyte and macrophage infiltration, cell debris and purulent exudate. Calcified, degenerative and necrotic cardiac myocytes and macrophages were reacted with anti-Enterovirus antibody (clone 5-D8/1), which recognizes an epitope on the VP1 peptide of most Coxsackievirus, echovirus, poliovirus and enterovirus strains. Therefore, the present two cases may be compatible with fulminant enterovirus-associated myocarditis. Using reverse transcriptase-semi-nested polymerase chain reaction, picornaviral RNA was detected in the amplified products extracted from the paraffin-embedded myocardial sample of case 1 but not in case 2.
The presence of granulomas in the skin of T-cell lymphoma patients is a rare but well-known phenomenon. The authors present the case of a 44-year-old Caucasian male, with a previously treated peripheral T-cell lymphoma, with cutaneous infiltration and extensive dyschromia on his lower limbs. Skin biopsies revealed the presence of sarcoid granulomas associated with the recurrence of the lymphoma, confirmed by immunostaining and molecular analysis. Although a new scheme of chemotherapy was started , he died 18 months later. There are two different patterns of skin granulomas associated with lympho-ma: granulomatous infiltrates admixed with neoplastic cells and cutaneous granulomas constituting a non-specific manifestation of the underlying lymphoma, but presently there is no evidence supporting their relationship with lymphoma prognosis.
A 61-year-old woman developed pain in the right thigh, paraplagia of the lower extremities and lumbago in November 1996. A lumbar spine roentgenogram showed lytic change in L2, and magnetic resonance imaging showed a patchy destructive lesion and compression of the dural sac from the right by a tumour. Computed tomography (CT) myelography showed a motheaten destructive lesion in L2 and projection of the tumour into the spinal canal. Abdominal ultrasound, CT and cavography showed dilatation of the inferior vena cava (IVC) and an intraluminal tumour about 2x2.8x4 cm in size in the IVC. The tumour arose from the IVC just beneath the renal vein and extended to just short of the right atrium. Both vertebral and intraluminal biopsy materials showed the same morphology, in which atypical spindle cells admixed with multinucleated giant cells proliferated in a fascicular growth pattern. Neoplastic cells were strongly positive for alpha-smooth muscle actin. We diagnosed vascular leiomyosarcoma arising from the IVC with metastasis to the lumbar vertebrae. Cases of vascular leiomyosarcoma diagnosed by intraluminal biopsy are rare.
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