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Full-Text Articles in Pathology

Moans, Palpable Groin, And Entrapment Of Bone: A Case Of Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor In An Otherwise Healthy Hispanic Male, Nelson D. Gonzalez, Christine E. Loftis, Rosa Guedez-White Sep 2023

Moans, Palpable Groin, And Entrapment Of Bone: A Case Of Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor In An Otherwise Healthy Hispanic Male, Nelson D. Gonzalez, Christine E. Loftis, Rosa Guedez-White

Research Symposium

Background: Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNTs) are rare malignant soft tissue sarcomas that have an incidence of about 0.001 %. MPNTs typically occur in individuals who have neurofibromatosis or secondary to radiation therapy and rarely occur sporadically. We present a case of a previously healthy 56-year-old gentleman who was diagnosed with MPNTs.

Case: A healthy 56-year-old gentleman presented with worsening LLQ abdominal pain for 6 months. Associated symptoms included bloating, LLE swelling, early satiety for the past 2 months, and a 5-10lb unintentional weight loss. Patient denied recent cough, night sweats, dyspnea, fever, chills, melena or hematochezia. Vitals were …


Treatment-Resistant Hypercalcemia From Ectopic Pth Hypersecretion Suspected Secondary To Disseminated Ovarian Cancer, Alexander M. Balinski, Neil J. Khatter, Jeffrey M. Gold, Krishna S. Pothugunta, Vamshi K. Garlapaty, Steven M. Rankin, Christopher A. Thornburn, Jamal Abu-Khaled Jan 2021

Treatment-Resistant Hypercalcemia From Ectopic Pth Hypersecretion Suspected Secondary To Disseminated Ovarian Cancer, Alexander M. Balinski, Neil J. Khatter, Jeffrey M. Gold, Krishna S. Pothugunta, Vamshi K. Garlapaty, Steven M. Rankin, Christopher A. Thornburn, Jamal Abu-Khaled

Articles

Hypercalcemia of malignancy (HCM) can present secondary to hypersecretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH)-related protein (PTHrP) from malignant tumors, but rare cases of HCM have also been documented due to inappropriate PTH secretion from ectopic neoplasms. Here, we report an unusual case of HCM due to hypersecretion of PTH suspected secondary to a disseminated mucinous ovarian adenocarcinoma. A 45-year-old female presented with severe hypercalcemia and significant elevations in both PTH and PTHrP two weeks after total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and suboptimal debulking of a newly discovered left ovarian mucinous adenocarcinoma with numerous metastases. Ectopic PTH secretion was highly suspected …


Breast Imaging Chameleon: Pseudoangiomatous Stromal Hyperplasia Presenting As Breast Malignancy, Rabail Raza, Kulsoom Fatima, Muhammad Usman Tariq May 2020

Breast Imaging Chameleon: Pseudoangiomatous Stromal Hyperplasia Presenting As Breast Malignancy, Rabail Raza, Kulsoom Fatima, Muhammad Usman Tariq

Department of Radiology

Pseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) is a benign mesenchymal proliferative lesion of the breast, often an incidental finding on breast biopsy specimens and rarely presents as a palpable lump. The case being reported is interesting as a lactating female presented with gross left breast enlargement due to a huge firm mass with skin thickening and palpable left axillary lymph nodes. A provisional diagnosis of left breast malignancy was made and the patient extensively worked up with ultrasound, CT scan, bone scan and core biopsy. The histopathology, however, revealed PASH of the breast. There was no invasive or in situ malignancy. The …


Is Excision Of Radial Scars Identified On Cnb Necessary?, K. Nimtz, K. Hookim, Md, A. Sevrukov, Md, T. Tsangaris, Md, A. Willis, Md, A. Berger, Md, M. Lazar, Md Feb 2019

Is Excision Of Radial Scars Identified On Cnb Necessary?, K. Nimtz, K. Hookim, Md, A. Sevrukov, Md, T. Tsangaris, Md, A. Willis, Md, A. Berger, Md, M. Lazar, Md

Phase 1

Introduction: Quantifying the risk of upgrade to malignancy with radial scars has been an ongoing challenge, as the published upgrade rate varies widely from 0-40%, making management strategy controversial. The lack of consensus on optimal management highlights the need for further analysis. We sought to identify our institutional upgrade rate of radial scar identified on core needle biopsy (CNB).

Methods: A retrospective review of pathology and radiology databases was performed to identify radial scars found on CNB. We excluded patients with malignancy associated with radial scar and those who did not undergo surgical excision. The upgrade rates to …