A case of matrix-producing carcinoma (MPC), which is a unique variant of breast cancer, is described with cytopathological and radiographical findings. A 75-year-old female presented with a palpable mass in her right breast. After confirmation of the cytopathological diagnosis, the patient received a right mastectomy with ipsilateral axillary lymph node dissection. The histopathological examination revealed MPC. The Union Internationalis Contra Cancrum postoperative clinical stage was IIB. The patient is well and without disease 18 months after the surgery.
A case of anthracosis of the esophagus is reported. The patient was a previously healthy 69-year-old Japanese woman. A black and slightly elevated lesion was detected in her esophagus by upper gastroesophageal fiberoscopic examination. Endoscopically, the lesion looked like malignant melanoma. Thoracic esophagotomy was then performed. Histological examination revealed a pigmented lesion beneath the mucosal epithelial layer. The lesion consisted of an aggregation of histiocytes containing an abundance of tiny black pigments. A few mature lymphocytes and plasma cells were also evident in the periphery of the lesion. Histologically, these findings looked like lymph nodes in the pulmonary hilus; however, no lymph nodal structure was evident in the esophageal wall. Traction diverticula were also noted in the pigmented lesion. The patient has remained well without disease for 9 months since the surgery. Although anthracosis is a rare condition in the esophagus, the present case gave warning to pathologists and clinicians that it does indeed occur. Endoscopists and pathologists should differentiate anthracosis from malignant melanoma because the treatment and outcome are quite different for each.
The effect of surgical treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was evaluated in 149 resected cases, 83.2% of which were associated with liver cirrhosis. The 3- and 5-year survival rates were 60.1% and 39.4%, respectively. The mortality rate was 4.1%. In patients aged over 70 years, liver cirrhosis was found in 53.3% of cases and the mortality rate was 6.7%. The 3- and 5-year survival rates were 50.8% and 33.9%, respectively. Factors that significantly affected survival for more than 5 years were a tumor size of less than 3 cm, Stage I disease, vp(-), IMo, and diploid type. The 5-year survival rate for patients with a single tumor of 3 cm or less was 54.2%, regardless of the surgical procedure. All 15 patients with a solitary tumor of 2 cm or less (Stage I, small liver tumor) were alive with a 5-year survival rate of 100%. The problem is the treatment of patients with a tumor measuring 3-5 cm in diameter and associated liver cirrhosis, because their prognosis after surgery is the worst. HrS (subsegmentectomy) is the minimal procedure of limited hepatectomy for these cases with postoperative multidisciplinary therapy.
The plasma levels of thromboxane B2 (TxB2) and 6-keto-prostaglandin F1alpha (6-KF) in the peripheral and portal blood increase after an extensive hepatectomy, and even more so in cases with complications. In this cell biological study, we estimated the prostanoids in the portal system to clarify which organ produces them, while also evaluating the effect of a splenectomy in conjunction with an extensive hepatectomy. Our results showed that the level of TxB2 in the splenic vein was significantly higher than that in the mesenteric vein. Furthermore, the TxA2 produced by splenic macrophages after an extensive hepatectomy was significantly more than after a sham operation. We also observed the hepatocyte damage to be less in the group that underwent an 84% hepatectomy and splenectomy than in the group that underwent the same hepatectomy without a splenectomy. It therefore appears important both to suppress the splenic macrophages from producing TxA2 and to prevent remnant hepatic dysfunction after an extensive hepatectomy.
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