21 research outputs found

    Myxoid liposarcoma of the spermatic cord: US and MR imaging findings

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    We report a patient with myxoid liposarcoma of the spermatic cord in whom combined use of both ultrasound (US) and MRI helped to suggest the diagnosis. The lesion was solid at US and vascularized at color Doppler. T1-weighted MRI did not show fat within it; on T2-weighted images it had high signal intensity, with a cyst-like appearance. It is known that fat-poor myxoid liposarcomas with high water content may mimic a cystic lesion on non-contrast-enhanced MR; then, a combination of MRI findings, suggesting a cyst, and of US findings, showing the mass was actually solid and vascularized, allowed preoperatively the diagnosis of fat-poor myxoid liposarcoma. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc

    Bladder cell culture on small intestinal submucosa as bioscaffold: Experimental study on engineered urothelial grafts

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    Objectives: To investigate the feasibility to perform primary urothelial cell culture using porcine small intestinal submucosa as a delivery scaffold both in vitro and after in vivo implantation in a rabbit model. Materials and methods: Bladder mucosa samples were aseptically obtained from a group of eight male rabbits. The mucosa was cut into fragments and placed on small intestinal submucosa matrices for selective urothelial cell culture. After complete in vitro epithelization the matrices were shaped into tubes and placed in the subcutaneous tissue and subdartos of donor rabbits. The pattern of cell growth and delivery was evaluated on retrieved grafts using histology and immunostaining at the end of the in vitro phase; then 5, 10 and 20 days after implantation. Results: Histological and immunohistochemical analysis of the in vitro primary culture showed the acellular matrices covered with a thin uninterrupted monolayer of urothelial cells. The implants examined on the day 5 mantained the epithelial configuration of the cultured grafts in all samples retrieved. On the day 10 the urothelium showed increased thickness taking on a bilayer configuration. On day 20, all grafts presented the transitional cells arranged in a double layer closely resembling the natural urothelium. The immunostaining pattern displayed the mantaining of urothelial cell phenotype. No differences in epithelium growth and delivery were noted between the two sites of implantation. Five days after implantation, the histological analysis of small intestinal submucosa showed a medium degree tissue reaction with the presence of acute inflammatory cells. Angiogenesis was demonstrated by the development of several new vessels inside the matrix. After twenty days, small intestinal submucosa was gradually replaced with host tissue. Conclusion: The small intestinal submucosa proved to function as a means of delivering of autologous urothelial cells cultured in vitro. After ectopic in vivo implantation the bioscaffold maintained viability and growth of the surrounding cells until its degradation

    Interstitial cystitis with plasma cell bladder infiltration: case report and literature review.

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    [Coexistence of different histotypes of renal carcinoma:our experience and literature review.]

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    The coexistence of multiple, synchronous primary tumors of different histology within the same kidney is a rare condition. We report herein a series of five patients with two tumors of different histology involving synchronously the same kidney. Materials and Methods We reviewed the pathology reports of a series of 381 patients who underwent surgery for primary renal tumors at our institution from 2000 to 2007. In the files of all patients with synchronous tumors of different histology, special attention was given to the results of imaging studies. Results Five out of 381 patients (1.37%) had coexistence of two primary tumors of different histology within the same kidney. Four patients had ultrasonography as the first imaging procedure, one patient had ultrasonography as the second imaging procedure; all had preoperative CT of the abdomen. Both lesions were detected by preoperative CT in 4/5 of the cases; in the remaining one, the smaller lesion was not visible, even in retrospect. Conclusions The coexistence of multiple and synchronous primary tumors of different histology within the same kidney has been only rarely described. To the best of our knowledge, in literature there are only case reports with the exception of a case of renal oncocytoma with evolving papillary RCC. We believe that this condition could be more frequent if the radiologist and the anatomopathologist try to find it. </jats:sec
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