32 resultados para FOCAL SEGMENTAL GLOMERULOSCLEROSIS
Resumo:
A mucinose cutânea focal é um padrão de reação histológica descrita em várias doenças no qual existe uma deposição focal anormal de mucinas na derme. Os autores apresentam um caso de um doente de 62 anos de idade, com placas infiltradas assintomáticas no couro cabeludo frontal e occipital, com três meses de evolução. Biópsias seriadas demostraram um infiltrado linfocitário moderado e deposição homogénea de mucinas na derme, sem alterações da epiderme, unidade pilossebácea, epidermotropismo ou granulomas. Investigações posteriores revelaram um adenocarcinoma primário do pulmão. A mucinose cutânea focal pode ter um amplo espectro de apresentações clínicas. Relatamos este caso para ilustrar uma apresentação incomum de mucinose cutânea focal no couro cabeludo e realçar a importância de excluir uma doença secundária associada. No melhor conhecimento dos autores este é o primeiro caso relatado de uma possível associação entre o adenocarcinoma do pulmão e mucinose cutânea.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: To investigate if the shading sign is an exclusive MRI feature of endometriomas or endometrioid tumors, and to analyze its different patterns. METHODS: Three hundred and fourty six women with adnexal masses who underwent 1.5/3-T MRI were included in this retrospective, board-approved study. The shading sign was found in 56 patients, but five cases were excluded due to lack of imaging follow-up or histological correlation. The final sample included 51 women. The type of tumor and the pattern of shading were recorded for each case. RESULTS: Thirty endometriomas and five endometrioid carcinomas were found. The remaining 16 cases corresponded to other benign and malignant tumors. The overall sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were 73%, 93%, 59%, and 96%, respectively. Restricting the analysis to cystic lesions without solid or fat component, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were 73%, 96%, 94%, and 80%. Five shading patterns were identified: layering (15.7%), liquid-liquid level (11.8%), homogenous (45.1%), heterogeneous (11.8%), and focal/multifocal shading within a complex mass (19.6%). No significant correlation was found between these patterns and the type of tumor. CONCLUSIONS: The shading sign is not exclusive of endometriomas or endometrioid tumors. Homogenous shading was the most prevalent pattern in endometriomas and half of the cases with focal/multifocal shading within a complex mass were endometrioid carcinomas.