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7 "Abscess"
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Case Reports
Chondromyxoid Fibroma of the Ethmoid Sinus Complicated by a Brain Abscess: A Case Report and Literature Review.
Kyu Yeoun Won, Juhie Lee, Youn Wha Kim, Eui Jong Kim, Sung Wan Kim, Yong Koo Park
Korean J Pathol. 2010;44(5):547-550.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4132/KoreanJPathol.2010.44.5.547
  • 3,486 View
  • 22 Download
  • 2 Crossref
AbstractAbstract PDF
Chondromyxoid fibroma (CMF) is a relatively rare bone tumor that was first described by Jaffe and Lichtenstein in 1948. CMF of the sinonasal tract is very rare. A 28-year-old male presented with long-standing, intermittent, pulsatile pain in the right temporal area. A computed tomography scan showed a 20 x 19 mm round, bony density in the right ethmoid sinus with fluid collection in the ethmoid and frontal sinuses. Additionally, a cystic lesion with surrounding edema was found in the right frontal lobe. The patient underwent a partial ethmoidectomy and frontostomy. A histological examination showed polygonal and stellate cells in a myxoid and chondroid background with a pattern of lobulation and plaque-like calcification. The bone lesion was revealed as a CMF of the ethmoidal sinus, and the frontal lobe cystic lesion was a brain abscess associated with the CMF. We present the case of a CMF of the ethmoid sinus complicated by a brain abscess.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Juxtacortical chondromyxoid fibroma in the small bones: two cases with unusual location and a literature review
    Sun-Ju Oh, So Hak Chung
    Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine.2022; 56(3): 157.     CrossRef
  • Treatment of cryotherapy and orthotopic transplantation following chondromyxoid fibroma of zygomatic bone
    Zhi-Chao Zhu, Yi-Fei Yang, Xu Yang, Yan Liu, Yi-nan Cheng, Zhao-Yao Sun, Tian-Shu Xu, Wen-Jun Yang
    Medicine.2018; 97(31): e11707.     CrossRef
Granulomatous(Lobular) Mastitis in a Pregnant Woman: A case report.
Kyu Rae Kim, Hee Sung Kim, Yeon Lim Suh, Jung Hyun Yang, Howe Jung Ree
Korean J Pathol. 1996;30(3):261-265.
  • 2,239 View
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AbstractAbstract PDF
Granulomatous(lobular) mastitis is a distinct disease entity of unknown etiology which is characterized by noncaseating granulomatous lobulocentric inflammation. We describe a rare case of granulomatous(lobular) mastitis of a 36 year-old pregnant woman a review of the literature. The mass which was discovered in the third month of her pregnancy, began as a localized, nontender mass on the left breast and persisted during her entire pregnancy. It decreased slightly in size when she began taking post-partum bromocriptine. Clinically and mammographically, the mass was highly suspected as a carcinoma with axillary lymph node metastasis. Fine needle aspiration smears revealed numerous aggregates of granulomas composed of epithelioid histiocytes admixed with multinucleated giant cells of Langhans' and foreign body type, and collections of polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Ziehl-Neelsen, silver methenamine and PAS stain were negative for acid-fast bacilli, fungus, and bacilli on the smear respectively. Histologically, granulomatous inflammation was centered on the breast lobules. Caseation necrosis was absent, instead, numerous microabscesses were formed in the center of the granulomas. Cultures of the fresh tissue for the AFB, aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, and fungus were all negative. Excision of the mass was performed without further treatment and there was no recurrence of the mass 6 months postoperatively. An autoimmune mechanism, infection, and some association with oral contraceptives have been suggested as etiologic factors in the literature.
Serratia marcescens Skin Abscess.
Chan Kwon Jung, Young Shin Kim, Kyo Young Lee, Kyungja Han, Chang Suk Kang, Sang In Shim, Jun Young Lee, Baik Kee Cho
Korean J Pathol. 1998;32(11):1032-1034.
  • 2,703 View
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AbstractAbstract
Serratia marcescens is the most important member of the genus Serratia and causes opportunistic infections, particularly pneumonia and septicemia in patients with malignancy, renal failure (acute and chronic), and diabetes mellitus. The most common portals of entry are known to be, in descending order, lung, genitourinary tract, intravenous line, gastrointestinal tract, and skin. S. marcescens rarely causes skin infection because it does not normally colonize human skin. Only six cases of S. marcescens cellulitis were reported. Five of them were immunocompromised patients. We have experienced a case of skin abscess caused by S. marcescens, which was found in a 59-year-old woman. She was undergoing prior antibiotic treatment after insulinoma surgery. S. marcescens was isolated from the skin abscess as a sole organism. She was treated with appropriate antibiotics that exhibited sensitivities for the organism and cured without any complication. The authors report a case of S. marcescens infection on the skin of a 59-year-old woman and review the literature concerning this organism as a causative agent.
Original Articles
Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology of Periductal Mastitis (Subareolar Abscess) and its Clinical Significance of Cytological Diagnosis.
Han Seong Kim, Mee Joo, Sun Hee Chang, Ji Eun Kwak, Sung Hye Park, Byung Ju Song
Korean J Cytopathol. 2006;17(1):27-31.
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AbstractAbstract PDF
Periductal mastitis is a specific clinicopathologic entity, and is referred to by several names: recurrent subareolar abscess, squamous metaplasia of the lactiferous duct, and Zuska's disease. Clinically, the differentiation of periductal mastitis from other benign lesions and carcinomas around the nipple frequently proves a difficult proposition. We reviewed the fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) of 14 cases of periductal mastitis, which had been diagnosed either radiologically, histologically, or clinically. The patient group included 13 female patients, and one male. The majority of the patients in this group had presented with subareolar masses. All cases evidenced characteristic anucleated squamous cell clusters within a mixed inflammatory background. A diagnosis of periductal mastitis can be rendered fairly readily on excisional biopsy. However, FNAC is considered to be superior to excisional biopsy as an initial diagnostic procedure for any palpable mass in subareolar lesions of the breast. FNAC can also be a useful diagnostic technique in cases of periductal mastitis, even in the early phases of the disease. A definitive diagnosis of subareolar abscess via FNAC will enable the clinician to select the most appropriate medical or surgical treatment.
Eosinophilic Liver Abscess in Patients with Gastric Carcinoma.
Soon Won Hong, Ho Guen Kim, Chan Il Park, Sang In Lee
Korean J Pathol. 1993;27(1):27-33.
  • 2,004 View
  • 39 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
Sixteen cases of heavy eosinophil infiltration or eosinophilic abscess of the liver in patients with gastric carcinoma were analyzed to draw attention to this interesting combination and to persue the pathogenetic mechanism. Peripheral blood eosinophilia and hepatic granuloma were found in only 5 and 4 cases, respectively. Neither the patients' stool nor the hepatic tissues disclosed any parasitic worms or eggs, although the skin tests for Clonorchis sinensis and Paragonimus westermani were positive in 2 cases. Among stomach carcinomas, early gastric cancer tended to have more eosinophils than advanced carcinoma, but was less frequently associated with the infiltration of mast cells. In the regional lymph nodes, there was no infiltration of eosinophils even in the presence of tumor metastasis. In the liver, none of the 16 cases had metastatic gastric carcinoma and mast cells were found in only 2 cases. The results suggest that heavy hepatic infiltration of eosinophils in gastric carcinoma patients is not of the parasitic or allergic cause, but of certain eosinophil chemotactic factor which may gain access to accumulate in the liver following released from the gastric carcinoma and transfered through the portal vein.
Case Reports
Placetnal Findings of Septic Abortion Caused by Listeria Monocytogenes: A case report.
Kyu Rae Kim, Hee Mo Kim, Joo Yeon Cho, Kyung Sub Cha
Korean J Pathol. 1991;25(4):387-391.
  • 2,107 View
  • 26 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
Since human listeriosis was firstly described by Nyfeldt in 1929, Listeria monocytogenes as a cause of septic abortion has been well known. It primarily affects pregnant woman and neonates, the elderly, and persons with immune-system dysfunction due to immunosuppressive drugs, malignant tumors or AIDS. Although several large epidemic listeriosis have been reported in the English literatures, it is still an underdiagnosed and underreported cause of congenital sepsis and septic abortion, because it is not always easy to isolate the organism in culture. There are 17 cases reports of Listeria monocytogenes infection in Korea, however, most of which were described about the bascteriologically proven cases. We describe placental findings of a septic abortion caused by Listeria monocytogenes at 15 weeks gestation in a 23-year-old primigravida woman. Placental examination showed characteristic and relatively specific patterns of granulomatous microabscesses composed of necrotic nuclear debris in the center and surrounding epithelioid histocytes enmeshed in fibrin between the acutely inflamed villi. There were numerous gram positive bacilli on Brown-Brenn stain.
Splenic Abscess: Three cases report.
Mi Jin Kim, Hae Joo Nam, Won Hee Choi, Tae Sook Lee
Korean J Pathol. 1988;22(3):301-307.
  • 1,544 View
  • 12 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
Splenic abscess is uncommon, but often fatal entity characterized by high mortality rate which ranges from 60 to 100%, due to nonspecific clinical presentation and failure to preoperative definitive diagnosis. Clinical symptom or simple X-ray was not helpful in diagnosing splenic abscess. Perhaps the most useful information was obtained from the scanning and computerized tomography. Emphasis is placed on the necessity for prompt diagnosis and surgical intervention when splenic abscess was suspected. We have experienced three cases of splenic abscess. Case 1 was a 59 year-old male patient; the cause was possibly direct spreading from pancreatitis; The culture demonstrated klebsiella oxytoca.
Case
2 was a 42 year-old female patient; the abscess was produced by preceding infarct. Case 3 was a 64 year-old female; metastatic adenocarcinoma was identified in the soft tissue around spleen, that suggest causative factor. All three cases showed multiple abscesses.

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