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Fractured colon: an endoscopically distinctive lesion associated with colonic perforation following colonoscopy in patients with collagenous colitis [Case Report]

Sherman, Alex; Ackert, John J; Rajapaksa, Roshini; West, A Brian; Oweity, Thaira
BACKGROUND: Collagenous colitis is characterized by collagen deposition in the superficial colonic mucosa, beneath the surface epithelium, resulting in chronic nonbloody diarrhea of variable severity. The mucosa generally appears endoscopically normal. METHODS: We report the occurrence of distinctive linear mucosal tears, unassociated with trauma, in 4 patients during diagnostic colonoscopy. The patients' tissue specimens were examined histologically, and clinical courses were recorded. OBSERVATIONS: Recognition of linear 'fractures' was followed in 3 patients by colonic perforation. One patient required colectomy. Severe collagenous colitis was present in all. The resection specimen contained shallow linear ulcers overlying fibrotic submucosa, with pneumatosis and acute peritonitis. CONCLUSIONS: We theorize that the stiffness of the colon in areas of collagenous colitis with submucosal fibrosis makes it susceptible to linear 'fractures' during colonoscopic air insufflation with subsequent transmural air dissection. We urge extreme caution if this lesion is recognized at colonoscopy and recommend aborting the examination and obtaining plain radiographs to detect free intraperitoneal air
PMID: 15087693
ISSN: 0192-0790
CID: 56129

Malignant solitary fibrous tumor of the tongue [Case Report]

Shnayder, Yelizaveta; Greenfield, Barak J; Oweity, Thaira; DeLacure, Mark D
Solitary fibrous tumor is a generally benign spindle-cell neoplasm that has been predominantly described in the visceral pleura and other serosal sites and is extremely rare in the head and neck area. We report the first known case of malignant solitary fibrous tumor of the tongue in a 57-year-old female patient who experienced rapid growth of a longstanding right anterior tongue mass, with associated dysphagia and dysarthria. Magnetic resonance imaging was suggestive of a low-flow vascular malformation not requiring preoperative embolization. The patient underwent partial peroral glossectomy for the excision of the tumor. Final pathology, however, was consistent with solitary fibrous tumor, characterized as malignant by histopathologic criteria, and the patient was returned for re-excision of the close surgical margins. The patient has experienced symptomatic improvement, and she remains free of recurrence 12 months later. All reports of solitary fibrous tumors of the oral cavity and 3 reports of the tongue tumors described in the literature to date represent benign lesions. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a malignant solitary fibrous tumor of the tongue. Presentation, differential diagnosis, criteria for malignancy, treatment, and possible prognostic implications of this rare entity are discussed
PMID: 12884217
ISSN: 0196-0709
CID: 39128

Significance of elevated CD4/CD8 ratio in flow cytometry studies of nodal FNA material [Meeting Abstract]

Hernandez, O; Oweity, T; Inghirami, G; Ibrahim, S
ISI:000180732500315
ISSN: 0023-6837
CID: 37145

Significance of elevated CD4/CD8 ratio in flow cytometry studies of nodal FNA material [Meeting Abstract]

Hernandez, O; Oweity, T; Inghirami, G
ISI:000180720100314
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 38515

Multinodular thyroid gland: Is there a role for aspirating more than one nodule? [Meeting Abstract]

Oweity, T; Waisman, J; Moreira, A; Yee, J; Cangiarella, J
ISI:000180720100495
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 38522

Multiple system Erdheim-Chester disease with massive hypothalamic-sellar involvement and hypopituitarism [Case Report]

Oweity, Thaira; Scheithauer, Bernd W; Ching, Hin San; Lei, ChangMohC; Wong, Koh Ping
Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare multiple system histiocytosis that is characterized pathologically by xanthogranulomatous infiltrates and radiologically by symmetrical sclerosis of long bones. The diagnosis is often confirmed by biopsy of bone or of orbital or retroperitoneal soft tissue. Intracranial involvement is rare. The authors report a case of ECD in which the diagnosis was made after biopsy of a hypothalamic mass. The mass had been discovered during a workup for panhypopituitarism in a 55-year-old man with urological and bone disease. Aside from diabetes insipidus, other features of pituitary insufficiency have seldom been reported and no patients have presented with a hypothalamic tumor. The endocrinological and neurological aspects of ECD are discussed, as is its differential diagnosis. Reported cases of the disorder associated with hypopituitarism or found during biopsy of central nervous system structures are also reviewed
PMID: 11838810
ISSN: 0022-3085
CID: 96949

Necrotizing angiitis of the small intestine related to AA-amyloidosis: a novel association [Case Report]

Oweity T; West AB; Stokes MB
A 71-year-old man with intestinal pseudo-obstruction was found to have a diffusely thickened adynamic small bowel with AA-amyloid in submucosal vessels and muscularis propria, foreign body giant cell reaction to amyloid, and necrotizing angiitis. The mucosa was unremarkable. Immunostains demonstrated numerous CD68+ monocyte/macrophages and CD8+ T cells associated with the amyloid deposits. The patient had no evidence of systemic vasculitis and no underlying cause for AA-amyloidosis was identified. Necrotizing angiitis coexistent with amyloid angiopathy has been reported in brain and temporal arteries, but not in the gastrointestinal tract and not with AA-amyloid. The inflammatory cell infiltrates in this case are consistent with a foreign-body and/or cell-mediated immunologic reaction to AA-amyloid, although a role for these cells in amyloid formation cannot be excluded
PMID: 11484503
ISSN: 1066-8969
CID: 24249

Effect of clinical history on diagnostic accuracy in the cytologic interpretation of bronchial brush specimens

Raab SS; Oweity T; Hughes JH; Salomao DR; Kelley CM; Flynn CM; D'Antonio JA; Cohen MB
There has been little study of the effect of clinical history on pathologic diagnostic accuracy. Five pathologists retrospectively examined 97 bronchial brush specimens with and without clinical historic information. Forty-nine patients had a biopsy-proven malignant lesion, and 48 had a benign lesion. Diagnostic accuracy with and without history for each pathologist was determined with likelihood ratios and receiver operating characteristic curves. The overall diagnostic accuracy with and without history was 0.84 and 0.76, respectively. The average negative predictive value of a benign diagnosis decreased from 89.2% (with history) to 74.0% (without history). Overall, the cytopathologists were more reluctant to make a definitive malignant diagnosis without history compared with history. The average positive predictive value of a malignant diagnosis with and without history was almost identical. The absence of history leads to lower diagnostic accuracy in the cytologic interpretation of bronchial brush specimens partly because pathologists underdiagnose malignant lesions
PMID: 10884802
ISSN: 0002-9173
CID: 24250

Treatment of human glioblastoma by specific immunotherapy [Case Report]

Wood GW; Holladay FP; Oweity T; Watanabe I
PMID: 8230943
ISSN: 8755-0059
CID: 24251