TY - JOUR
T1 - Inflammatory pseudotumor of the stomach
T2 - Report of a highly infiltrative case with electron microscopic and immunohistochemical studies
AU - Kojimahara, Kenichi
AU - Mukai, Makio
AU - Yamazaki, Kazuto
AU - Yamada, Taketo
AU - Katayama, Tatsuro
AU - Nakada, Koh
AU - Uematsu, Shigeto
AU - Umezono, Akira
AU - Hosoda, Yasuhiro
PY - 1993/1
Y1 - 1993/1
N2 - A large, poorly demarcated, elevated lesion over the area ranging from the lower end of the esophagus to the lesser curvature of the cardiac region was examined in a 19 year old woman, and demonstrated an irregular and highly infiltrative proliferation of spindle cells over the full thickness of the gastric wall. Although the spindle cells grew mainly in the submucosa, they penetrated the muscularis propria, leaving intact muscle tissue that formed an irregular, island‐like pattern, and reached the subserosa. The cells were identified as myofibroblasts by light microscopy, immuno‐histochemistry and electron microscopy. The present case is considered to be of an inflammatory pseudotumor due to extremely infiltrative growth of myofibroblasts. This lesion differed from inflammatory fibroid polyp (similarly consisting of proliferating myofibroblasts accompanied by inflammatory cells) in terms of age at onset, tumor size, pattern of cell proliferation and main inflammatory cell component. This report also discusses the relationship between this lesion and a very recently advocated new entity, inflammatory fibrosarcoma of the mesentery and retroperito‐neum, which is a tumour closely simulating inflammatory pseudotumor.
AB - A large, poorly demarcated, elevated lesion over the area ranging from the lower end of the esophagus to the lesser curvature of the cardiac region was examined in a 19 year old woman, and demonstrated an irregular and highly infiltrative proliferation of spindle cells over the full thickness of the gastric wall. Although the spindle cells grew mainly in the submucosa, they penetrated the muscularis propria, leaving intact muscle tissue that formed an irregular, island‐like pattern, and reached the subserosa. The cells were identified as myofibroblasts by light microscopy, immuno‐histochemistry and electron microscopy. The present case is considered to be of an inflammatory pseudotumor due to extremely infiltrative growth of myofibroblasts. This lesion differed from inflammatory fibroid polyp (similarly consisting of proliferating myofibroblasts accompanied by inflammatory cells) in terms of age at onset, tumor size, pattern of cell proliferation and main inflammatory cell component. This report also discusses the relationship between this lesion and a very recently advocated new entity, inflammatory fibrosarcoma of the mesentery and retroperito‐neum, which is a tumour closely simulating inflammatory pseudotumor.
KW - inflammatory fibroid tumor
KW - inflammatory fibrosarco. ma
KW - inflammatory pseudotumor
KW - myofibroblastic proliferation
KW - stomach
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1440-1827.1993.tb02916.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1440-1827.1993.tb02916.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 8465658
AN - SCOPUS:0027404579
SN - 1320-5463
VL - 43
SP - 65
EP - 70
JO - Pathology international
JF - Pathology international
IS - 1-2
ER -