Angiomyolipoma is a hamartomatous condition which can occur as a component of the tuberous sclerosis complex. Lymphangiomyomatosis, another hamartomatous lesion occurring predominantly in the lungs, has long been suspected to be related to angiomyolipoma and tuberous sclerosis because of occasional clinical associations. We undertook this study to provide further support for the close relationship between these two entities. Five cases of lymphangiomyomatosis and 20 case of angiomyolipoma were retrieved for histological review and immunohistochemical studies. The antibodies used were anti-muscle specific actin (HHF-35), anti-desmin (D33) and anti-melanoma (HMB-45). Lesions featuring smooth muscle proliferation were used as controls. The proliferated smooth muscle cells in both lymphangiomyomatosis and angiomyolipoma were much plumper and paler or even clear, when compared with the deeply eosinophilic cytoplasm of the normal spindly smooth muscle cells and those of leiomyomas. Their nuclei were round to oval and pale rather than elongated and dark. Cells with bizarre nuclei were commoner in angiomyolipoma (18/20 cases) than lymphangiomyomatosis (1/5). In 12 cases of angiomyolipoma there were foci indistinguishable from lymphangiomyomatosis, i.e. plump spindle cells arranged in short fascicles around ramifying endothelium-lined spaces. All five cases of lymphangiomyomatosis stained for muscle-specific actin, desmin and HMB-45. For angiomyolipomas, the positivity rates for these markers were: 20/20, 17/20 and 18/20, respectively, including one case that was negative for both desmin and HMB-45. The various smooth muscle proliferations and tumours selected as controls were uniformly HMB-45 negative. The distinctive cytological features, morphological overlap and immunophenotypic profile all support a close relationship between lymphangiomyomatosis and angiomyolipoma, which probably represent different morphological manifestations of hamartomatous proliferation of a peculiar form of HMB-45-positive smooth muscle.
Sclerosing peritonitis (SP) is an uncommon but serious complication of CAPD with various suggested etiologies. We have documented 14 cases of SP in 18 patients who had used chlorhexidine in alcohol (ChA) in the connection procedure for CAPD. Thirteen died. Nine of the 14 patients had been transferred to hemodialysis or renal transplantation, yet all still developed symptoms of SP within a few months after transfer -even the 5 who were originally asymptomatic. The main symptoms of SP were peritoneal ultrafiltration failure, exudative bloody ascites and intestinal obstruction. They presented at around 5 years (30–80 months) after commencement of CAPD. Most deaths were related to intestinal obstruction. Four other patients with a comparable duration of ChA exposure were continued on CAPD with the Travenol Spike System (TSS), without further exposure to ChA. They were all asymptomatic of SP after 9–12 months. Comparing the 2 groups of asymptomatic patients, those transferred to TSS had a much better outcome after 9 months than those transferred to HD or renal transplantation (P=0.0476). We suggest that ChA is the main cause of SP in our patients and that continuing CAPD without further exposure to ChA is a better alternative than stopping CAPD to prevent the progression of SP.
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