Hypersomnia occurs frequently in patients with myotonic dystrophy (MyD). We performed a quantitative immunohistochemical study of serotonin (5-HT)-containing neurons linked to hypersomnia in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) and the superior central nucleus (SCN) in 8 patients with MyD, 5 of whom showed hypersomnia, and in 12 age-matched controls. The densities of 5-HT neurons in the DRN and the SCN were significantly lower in MyD patients with hypersomnia than in MyD patients without hypersomnia and controls. These data suggest that the loss of 5-HT neurons of the DRN and the SCN is associated with the presence of hypersomnia in MyD.
Neuroenteric cysts are benign intradural endoderm cysts lined by gastrointestinal (GI) or tracheobronchial epithelial cells. Their malignant transformation is extremely rare and only six cases have been reported. In these cases, tissue lineage of the cystic endoderm cells giving rise to carcinoma was not clearly identified either as respiratory or as GI type. Herein, we report a case of mucinous adenocarcinoma arising from the neuroenteric cyst with broncho-pulmonary differentiation in the right cerebral hemisphere of a Japanese woman in her late 50s. The cyst wall was entirely lined by the following respiratory epithelial components: stratified bronchial ciliated columnar epithelium with basal cells positive for CK5 and p63, terminal bronchiolar Clara cells positive for thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1, surfactant B and negative for surfactant C, type I pneumocytes positive for TTF-1, negative for surfactant B and C, and type II pneumocytes positive for TTF-1 and surfactant B and C. In addition, nests of hyperplastic single layered mucinous epithelial cells with bronchial goblet cell phenotype were also demonstrated, and histologic features were almost the same as the pulmonary type I congenital adenomatoid malformation (CCAM) with mucinous epithelial proliferation. The mucinous epithelial nests of type I CCAM are liable to develop mucinous adenocarcinoma and frequently accompany K-ras mutation and expression of p16. However, K-ras mutation and p-16 expression were not detected in this case.
Clonal analysis has shown that hepatocellular carcinoma arises from a single cell. However, the clonality of precancerous lesions and adjacent nonneoplastic tissues is not clear.
Torsion of the vermiform appendix is a rare disorder, which causes abdominal symptoms indistinguishable from acute appendicitis. We report a case (a 34-year-old male) of secondary torsion of the vermiform appendix with mucinous cystadenoma. This case was characterized by mild inflammatory responses, pentazocine-resistant abdominal pain, and appendiceal tumor, which was not enhanced by the contrast medium on computed tomography presumably because of reduced blood flow by the torsion. These findings may be helpful for the preoperative diagnosis of secondary appendiceal torsion.
These data suggest that the loss of TH+ neurons of the DCMN, the VCMN, and the SMN is associated with the presence of hypoventilation in MyD and may be an important feature of MyD.
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