The study of tumor markers in breast cancer tissue may supply information on the tumor's biological features and its clinical behaviour. Forty-nine primary breast cancer patients are evaluable to date. CEA, ferritin, TPA and CA15/3 were measured with radioimmunometric methods in the cytosol of carcinoma and normal tissue from the same breast. The concentrations of the four markers were higher in the tumor than in normal tissue in 42/49 cases for CEA, 47/49 for ferritin, 42/49 for TPA and in 24/29 for CA15/3. However, an overlap was found between carcinoma and normal tissue levels, particularly for CEA and TPA. We can conclude that the four substances studied may be markers of malignancy in breast carcinoma when non-malignant breast tissue from the same patient is determined at the same time, whereas assays within a single, unknown breast tissue sample may be useful only in the case of ferritin and, partly, CA15/3.
Mycobacterium chimaera is a non-tuberculous mycobacterium, member of the Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), which has become a global public health concern due to infection following cardiac surgery performed with contaminated heater-cooler units. M. chimaera infection is characterized by a long latency, non-specific signs and symptoms and high mortality rates. Thus, the diagnosis is still challenging both for forensic pathologists and for clinicians. Clinical manifestations of M. chimaera infection include endocarditis, hepatitis, nephritis, encephalitis and chorioretinitis. A constant histopathologic finding is the presence of non-caseating granulomas, with multinucleated giant cells and histiocytes. Hereby, we present two cases of fatal disseminated M. chimaera infection following aortic valve surgery reporting clinical history and post-mortem findings. Further, we provide a brief overview of the literature with a special focus on histopathological characteristics of M. chimaera infection. The aim of this article is to provide a complete synopsis of histopathological characteristics useful for forensic pathologists.
The postmortem diagnosis of anaphylactic death may be frustrating when victims are not hospital patients, even more so when they are recovered dead. The frequent lack of specific morphological findings in such cases means that diagnosis by the forensic pathologist must rely solely on exclusion criteria or circumstantial evidence. However, a diagnostic approach based on case history, analysis of circumstances, available clinical and necropsy findings, as well as toxicology, histopathology and biohumoral data, often allows demonstration of the cause of death. Some useful reflections on microscopic morphological data have come from two recent cases, where thorough data collection provided a reasonably certain diagnosis of anaphylactic death and systemic inflammatory response syndrome-related cardiac arrest, respectively. In both cases tissue histopathology proved crucial, since histochemical (GIEMSA) and immunohistochemical analysis (CD117 and tryptase) documented a large number of mast cells in tissues, particularly the laryngeal wall, and a discrepancy between cells positive for GIEMSA and tryptase and those positive for CD117. Staining for CD117 was also detected in cells with dendrite morphology and in a subpopulation of small lymphocytes with incised nuclei. The morphological findings of these cases are discussed, especially those obtained with immunohistochemistry, and the need for the latter data to be interpreted by experienced medical staff in the framework of a thorough analysis of all the data collected is highlighted.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.