The heterozygous carrier state of a rare hereditary disease, acatalasemia, has been defined biochemically. Affected homozygotes have no blood catalase activity, whereas heterozygotes show activities intermediate between this inactivity and the activity of normal controls, without overlap. Pedigrees show a high frequency of consanguineous marriages.
A case of squamous cell carcinoma of the endometrium in a 72-year-old woman is presented. A review of the previous 28 cases of endometrial squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) that are adequately substantiated in the literature revealed several misconceptions about this rare tumor: the association with pyometra is not as frequent; the lesion does occur in premenopausal women; squamous metaplasia of the endometrium is not always coexistent; and malignant transformation of squamous metaplasia to ESCC has never been convincingly demonstrated. In the current case, a focal sarcomatoid spindle-cell tumor was associated with typical ESCC; however, light and electron microscopic examinations provided convincing evidence that the tumor was composed solely of ESCC. Ultrastructure of the spindle-cell tumor revealed it to be essentially identical to that of a spindle-cell variant of squamous cell carcinoma reported previously.
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