scholarly journals Cutaneous Rosai-Dorfman Disease: A Case Report

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 243-247
Author(s):  
Nahla Shihab ◽  
Whitney Talbott ◽  
Nathalie O Kahn ◽  
Erisa Alia ◽  
Jeffrey M Weinberg

Cutaneous Rosai-Dorfman Disease (CRDD) is an uncommon benign histiocytosis of unknown etiology. CRDD is oftentimes misdiagnosed because it has variable clinical manifestations, particularly in the absence of lymphadenopathy. We report a case of a 23-year-old African American woman presenting with clustered nodular plaques on her right thigh, buttocks, back, and chest for the past two years. History, clinical, histopathological, and immunochemistry findings corresponded with CRDD, and as such, she was treated with halobetasol propionate 0.05% cream twice daily.

2020 ◽  
Vol 154 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S41-S42
Author(s):  
E Ozluk ◽  
R Shackelford

Abstract Introduction/Objective First described by Rosai and Dorfman in 1969, Rosai-Dorfman Disease (RDD) is an uncommon, idiopathic, reactive lymph node process with an unknown etiology. It may involve extra-nodal organs including the skin, bone, soft tissue, and eyes. However, breast involvement is rare and RDD confined to breast without nodal involvement is extremely uncommon. Methods Here we present a case of RDD confined to breast. The patient was a 51-year-old African American woman who was found to have an irregular, solid left breast mass on routine mammogram, which had speculated irregular margins and measured of 37.0 x 32.0 x 32.0 mm. She did not have any symptoms, nor any palpable lymph nodes. The clinician stated that the lesion was highly suspicious for a breast malignancy and requested a fine needle aspiration (FNA) of the mass, followed by total excision. Results An FNA was interpreted as atypical histiocytic cells in a mixed lymphoid background. Histopathologic examination revealed an ill-defined mass with sheets of histiocytes, plasma cells, and a mixed lymphocytic population, with occasional germinal centers. Some of the histiocytes were spindle shaped and associated with storiform collagen deposition. The histiocytes had single and multiple nuclei and exhibited occasional emperipolesis. Immunohistochemical staining with S100 diffusely highlighted the histiocytes, whereas CD1a was negative. CD3 and CD20 immunostains were positive for mixed-type lymphocytic infiltration. Cytokeratin staining was performed and reassuringly stained only the benign ductal cells. A diagnosis of RDD of the breast was made, based on these histopathologic findings. Conclusion We report an example of an extra-nodal RDD involving the mammary gland that was initially suspected to be breast carcinoma. RDD may still be a diagnostic challenge, especially in a patient with suspected carcinoma. It is the pathologist’s role to lead the clinician to the proper diagnosis and render a correct histopathologic diagnosis.


F1000Research ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rohit Kumar Gudepu ◽  
Mohtashim A. Qureshi ◽  
Ihtesham A. Qureshi ◽  
Lakshman Rao

Moyamoya is a rare idiopathic progressive vaso-occlusive disease characterized by irreversible condition of main blood vessels to the brain as they enter into the skull. We present a case of 36 year old African American female presenting to the Out Patient Clinic with headache which were on and off for 4-6 months and did not relieve on routine medical therapy. It was associated with weakness on right side for last few days. The patient was investigated with CT Angiogram, diagnosed as Moyamoya disease and operated. She has been followed up for the last 5 years and the patient has not complained of any headaches or focal neurological symptoms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Jerad A.K. Harris ◽  
Mark Shane Gillispie ◽  
Claribel Solario ◽  
Melody L. Tran ◽  
Rogelio Pinon-Gutierrez ◽  
...  

We describe a 47-year-old African American woman affected by a rapidly progressing thromboangiitis associated with high serum levels of lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)).


2020 ◽  
pp. 100-127
Author(s):  
Sarah Gilbreath Ford

This chapter examines parallel scenes in William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! (1936), Eudora Welty’s Delta Wedding (1946), and Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon (1977), where a character rushes into a haunted house seeking to climb the stairs only to be thwarted by a seemingly supernatural African American woman. These scenes signify the women’s contradictory roles as powerless property and powerful specters. Treated as property, the women do not just haunt the houses, they haunt as houses; they are conflated with the legal property of white families, even after the end of slavery. The women’s status as housekeepers, however, allows them a “keeping,” or possession of property, that provides them the power as specters to block the outsiders, who want to transgress the boundary of time to travel back into the past. Legal possession established by property rights confronts spectral possession signified by haunting.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 353-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Osama Elfituri ◽  
Snehal Sonawane ◽  
Haoliang Xu ◽  
Michael A. Warso ◽  
Elizabeth Wiley

Mammary sclerosing lobular hyperplasia is an uncommon benign fibroproliferative lesion of adolescent and young women, often of African American heritage with an incidence of ~3%. Patients generally complain of a palpable, painless, or slightly tender and well-defined lump in breast. Very rarely, this lesion may be bilateral and diffuse. The definitive diagnosis of sclerosing lobular hyperplasia requires histopathologic evaluation. Here, we describe a case of diffuse sclerosing lobular hyperplasia in a 29-year-old African American woman that required bilateral mastectomy and recurred bilaterally requiring second resections. This appears to be the first report of this phenomenon.


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