5 research outputs found
Inhibition of Progenitor Dendritic Cell Maturation by Plasma from Patients with Peripartum Cardiomyopathy: Role in Pregnancy-associated Heart Disease
Dendritic cells (DCs) play dual roles in innate and adaptive immunity based
on their functional maturity, and both innate and adaptive immune responses have
been implicated in myocardial tissue remodeling associated with
cardiomyopathies. Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is a rare disorder which
affects women within one month antepartum to five months postpartum. A high
occurrence of PPCM in central Haiti (1 in 300 live births) provided the unique
opportunity to study the relationship of immune activation and DC maturation
to the etiology of this disorder. Plasma samples from two groups (n = 12) of
age- and parity-matched Haitian women with or without evidence of PPCM were
tested for levels of biomarkers of cardiac tissue remodeling and immune
activation. Significantly elevated levels of GM-CSF, endothelin-1, proBNP and
CRP and decreased levels of TGF- were measured in PPCM subjects relative
to controls. Yet despite these findings, in vitro maturation of normal human
cord blood derived progenitor dendritic cells (CBDCs) was significantly
reduced (p < 0.001) in the presence of plasma from PPCM patients relative
to plasma from post-partum control subjects as determined by expression of
CD80, CD86, CD83, CCR7, MHC class II and the ability of these matured CBDCs
to induce allo-responses in PBMCs. These results represent the first findings
linking inhibition of DC maturation to the dysregulation of normal physiologic
cardiac
tissue remodeling during pregnancy and the pathogenesis of PPCM
Unusual Presentation of Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma with Clinical Course Mimicking Fever of Unknown Origin and Sepsis: Autopsy Study of Five Cases
Aim To describe a subset of cases with the unusual clinical and histomorphological
presentation of anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL)
mimicking fever of unknown origin (FUO) and sepsis.
Methods A pathology database was searched using full term Systematized
Nomenclature of Medicine codes for ALCL to identify 23ALCL
cases from the period 1999-2006. Of those, five cases that did not have
a correct premortem diagnosis were further analyzed to elucidate the
reasons for delayed and incorrect pre-mortem diagnosis. The analyzed
data included clinical presentation, duration of symptoms, duration
of hospital stay, premortem presumed cause of death, white blood cell
count, platelet count, anion gap and blood pH, liver enzymes (alanine
aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, lactate dehydrogenase,
alkaline phosphatase), lactate, coagulation tests (prothrombin time,
partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, D-dimers), microbiology cultures,
and radiology and surgical pathology reports. Autopsy reports
were reviewed for description of major gross findings, initial clinical
diagnosis, and cause of death.
Results Five fatal and pre-mortem unrecognized ALCL cases were
characterized by rapid decline, with histologic findings showing predominantly
extranodal involvement, intravascular lymphomatosis, and
hemophagocytosis. The cases were also characterized by unusual clinical
manifestations including a FUO, sepsis, and disseminated intravascular
coagulation-like picture, lactic acidosis, hepatosplenomegaly, and
absence of significant peripheral adenopathy.
Conclusions There is a distinct group of ALCLs with unique and specific
clinical, gross autopsy, and histopathologic findings. Recognition
of this clinical variant may facilitate early detection and potentially
timely diagnosis and therap