To determine the yield of brain biopsy and the predictive value of clinical features and ancillary studies, we retrospectively analyzed hospital chart data from 61 consecutive patients suspected of having primary angiitis of the CNS (PACNS). Biopsies disclosed PACNS in 22 (36%), alternative diagnoses in 24 (39%), and no diagnosis in 15 (25%). Clinical indicators and angiography were not useful predictors of PACNS. Brain biopsy should be the primary diagnostic tool in this setting because of the poor reliability of other indicators and because of the high yield of alternative diagnoses requiring different management.
A novel H1N1 influenza A virus emerged in April 2009, and rapidly reached pandemic proportions. We report a retrospective observational case study of pathologic findings in 8 patients with fatal novel H1N1 infection at the University of Michigan Health Systems (Ann Arbor) compared with 8 age-, sex-, body mass index-, and treatment-matched control subjects. Diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) in acute and organizing phases affected all patients with influenza and was accompanied by acute bronchopneumonia in 6 patients. Organizing DAD with established fibrosis was present in 1 patient with preexisting granulomatous lung disease. Only 50% of control subjects had DAD. Peripheral pulmonary vascular thrombosis occurred in 5 of 8 patients with influenza and 3 of 8 control subjects. Cytophagocytosis was seen in all influenza-related cases. The autopsy findings in our patients with novel H1N1 influenza resemble other influenza virus infections with the exception of prominent thrombosis and hemophagocytosis. The possibility of hemophagocytic syndrome should be investigated in severely ill patients with H1N1 infection.
Two patients presenting with signs and symptoms suggestive of nerve root compression secondary to extradural masses were found to have ligamentum flavum hematomas. Both patients had neurological deficits preoperatively and regained normal function postoperatively. There was no significant antecedent injury in either case. The symptom course was longer than that for spontaneous epidural hematoma. In one case, there was remodeling of bone, initially suggesting either infection or tumor.
To clarify the nosology of focal myositis (FM), we report the clinical and pathologic features of eight patients presenting with focal enlargement of one muscle. Most patients improved without immunosuppressive therapy, and none developed polymyositis. Pathologic features were those of an inflammatory myopathy, with muscle fiber hypertrophy and moderate to severe inflammation. In most cases, a clustering of tightly packed muscle fibers, enveloped by a thick bundle of fibrosis, was associated with the diagnosis of FM. Immunohistochemistry showed T cell predominance within the interstitial infiltrates in all cases. No evidence of vasculitis was present. Our findings suggest that FM is a benign condition that has certain clinical features separating it from other inflammatory myopathies. Pathologic changes, such as large clusters of nesting muscle fibers surrounded by thick fibrosis, are more characteristic of FM than polymyositis. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Muscle Nerve 23: 1569–1575, 2000
A patient with REM sleep behavior disorder who subsequently developed probable Lewy body dementia is now reported to have a definite pathologic diagnosis of Lewy body dementia. Examination of brain revealed Lewy bodies as well as marked neuronal loss in brainstem monoaminergic nuclei-particularly locus coeruleus and substantia nigra-that inhibit cholinergic neurons in the pedunculopontine nucleus mediating atonia during REM sleep.
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