Two patients had diffuse, reversible pulmonary injury possibly owing to gold sodium thiomalate treatment: a 32-year-old woman with chronic inflammatory arthritis compatible with seronegative rheumatoid arthritis and a 32-year-old man with shoulder arthralgia. The patients had received 420 mg and 325 mg of gold sodium thiomalate, respectively. Cough and dyspnea began in the seventh and fifth weeks of therapy, respectively. In both patients x-ray study showed bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, with no evidence of pleural disease. The woman had no other manifestations of hypersensitivity to gold. The man had exfoliative dermatitis fever and anemia. Lung biopsies from both patients revealed lymphocytes and plasma cells infiltrating the alveolar septa and interstitial fibrosis. The woman improved slowly during four months after discontinuation of therapy. Pulmonary symptoms recurred after additional gold therapy, and again resolved when gold was discontinued. The man, treated with prednisone, showed prompt remission and remains will without medication.
A study was made of 35 patients with tumors of the renal pelvis. Tumors were indipendently graded and staged by a newly proposed method. The method of staging correlated well with grading of renal pelvic tumors and bore a direct relationship with prognosis. The high incidence of associated urothelial tumors, especially on the involved side, mandated radical nephroureterectomy including a bladder cuff as the treatment of choice.
Electron microscopy (EM) was useful in establishing the final diagnosis in specific instances of liposarcoma and fibrosarcoma of the larynx. In the first case light microscopy revealed cells that met the histologic criteria of a low grade liposarcoma; EM revealed cells that displayed a varied ultrastructural differentiation; thus the tumor was classified as a mixed mesenchymal tumor rather than liposarcoma per se. In the second case, pathologic evaluation indicated a grade 2 fibrosarcoma. EM revealed malignant mesenchymal cells that closely recapitulated normal fibroblasts (no epithelial differentiation was present). This kind of information enables more accurate determination of the source of the primary lesion than results of light microcsopy alone.
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