86 results on '"Ahmed A. Hidayat"'
Search Results
2. The AFIP history of ocular leprosy
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Keith J. Wroblewski, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Ron C. Neafie, and Wayne M. Meyers
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Armed forces institute of pathology ,Ocular Pathology ,Perforation (oil well) ,Histopathology ,Autopsy ,Article ,Cornea ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,lcsh:Ophthalmology ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Trichiasis ,business.industry ,Ectropion ,Anterior segment ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,lcsh:RE1-994 ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Eyelid ,Leprosy ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) experience with Ocular Leprosy. Methods: The AFIP data banks were screened for cases with diagnosis of ocular leprosy. Files and slides stained with Hematoxylin-eosin and acid-fast staining were reviewed by the Division of Ocular Pathology and by the Infectious Diseases Pathology Branch. Results: Twenty-five cases were found from 1951 to 1985 and there were 15 males and 7 females and in 3 cases the sex was not given. The disease process ran from 4 months to 50 years in this series. Three patients also had systemic mycobacterium tuberculosis infections. The clinical manifestations of leprosy did not correlate with the histopathological findings. Clinically, corneal manifestations were the most common clinical presentation in 15 cases with only one perforation, iridocyclitis following in 9 patients and eyelid abnormalities ranging from ectropion to trichiasis in 7 patients. Two patients at autopsy had lepromatous cells in the ciliary body as the only ocular manifestation. Conclusions: In summary, this paper represents a series of ocular leprosy cases from the AFIP which shows the severity of ocular involvement, the predilection of anterior segment involvement and a large number of histopathologic indeterminate cases. The current immigrant and refugee crisis warrants revisting this ancient disease in the differential diagnosis. Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Armed forces institute of pathology, Cornea, Anterior segment, Histopathology, Autopsy
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- 2017
3. Ocular Tuberculosis: A Clinicopathologic and Molecular Study
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Narsing A. Rao, Michael Zapor, Ron C. Neafie, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Keith J. Wroblewski
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Adult ,DNA, Bacterial ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Tuberculosis ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Ocular Pathology ,Tuberculin ,Tuberculosis, Ocular ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Uveitis ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,Young Adult ,Biopsy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Molecular Biology ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Endophthalmitis ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Tuberculin Test ,business.industry ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Mass Chest X-Ray ,Dermatology ,Ophthalmology ,Infectious disease (medical specialty) ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,business ,Chest radiograph - Abstract
Objective To analyze the clinical profiles, histopathologic features, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis polymerase chain reaction testing in patients with ocular tuberculosis. Design Retrospective case series. Participants Forty-two patients. Methods This retrospective study was approved by the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) Institutional Review Board. The AFIP data banks were screened for cases with diagnosis of ocular tuberculosis using key words such as mycobacterium; tuberculosis; and acid-fast bacilli. Files and slides stained with hematoxylin–eosin and acid-fast staining were reviewed by the Division of Ocular Pathology and by the Infectious Diseases and Parasitic Diseases Pathology Branches. When available; blocks and unstained slides were sent to the Doheny Eye Institute; Los Angeles; California; for quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis to detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific DNA. Main Outcome Measures Tuberculin skin test (TST) results, as well as the chest radiograph results, were recorded. When acid-fast bacilli were identified in tissue, their locations—ocular or extraocular sites—were recorded. Emphasis was placed on lymph node involvement and any systemic diseases. Results In the histopathologic specimens, microscopy revealed a paucity of organisms, and often there were only 1 or 2 organisms associated with or near a giant cell or near an area of necrosis. The qPCR analysis was performed on 6 biopsy specimens. These specimens showed necrotizing granulomatous inflammation from 6 different patients; 3 had positive qPCR results. In 2 of the 3 cases with positive qPCR results, acid-fast bacilli were not found in the tissue sections. In 17 patients, TST results were available; 10 had positive results (60%) and 7 had negative results (40%). Fourteen chest radiograph results were submitted, and 8 (57%) of 14 patients had normal chest films. Conclusions This study suggests that in dealing with those populations at increased risk of tuberculosis (e.g., immigrants from endemic areas and human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients) or patients receiving biologic therapy, the ophthalmologist should endeavor to entertain this diagnosis and to rely on the support of infectious disease specialists and pulmonologists to help solidify the diagnosis, because the current methods for the diagnosis have limited sensitivity. Financial Disclosure(s) The author(s) have no proprietary or commercial interest in any materials discussed in this article.
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- 2011
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4. Kablosuz ağlarda yönlendirme protokollerinin başarımlarının değerlendirilmesi
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Ahmed, Fahad Hidayat Ahmed, Öztürk, Serkan, and Bilgisayar Mühendisliği Anabilim Dalı
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Computer Engineering and Computer Science and Control ,Bilgisayar Mühendisliği Bilimleri-Bilgisayar ve Kontrol - Abstract
Tasarsız ağlar, altyapı ihtiyacı olmadan istasyonlar arasında anlık ve geçici iletişim kurabilen, kendi kendine yapılandırma yapabilen ve hareket kabiliyeti sağlayabilen ağlardır. Tasarsız ağ yapısında altyapı kurulumu olmadan istasyonlar her yerde ve her zaman bir ağ oluşturulabilirler ya da bir ağa katılabilirler. İstasyonlar arasında haberleşmenin gerçekleştirebilmesi için yönlendirme işlemi gerekmektedir. Kaynaktan hedefe bilgi paketi iletilirken uygun yolun bulunması ve hesaplanması yönlendirme protokolleri sayesinde gerçekleşir.Bu tez çalışmasında OPNET benzetim programı kullanılarak Tasarsız isteğe bağlı uzaklık vektör yönlendirme protokolü (AODV), Dinamik kaynak yönlendirme protokolü (DSR), Geçici sıralı yönlendirme algoritması (TORA), Optimize edilmiş bağlantı durumu yönlendirme protokolü (OLSR) ve Coğrafi yönlendirme protokollerinin (GRP) başarımları değerlendirilmiştir. Sabit ve mobil istasyonlardan oluşan tasarsız ve kablosuz ağlarda farklı paket boyutları ve farklı istasyon sayıları için yönlendirme protokolleri karşılaştırılmıştır. Ağ gecikmesi, MAC gecikmesi, yeniden iletim ve iş yükü sonuçları değerlendirilmiştir. Tüm sonuçlar incelendiğinde OLSR protokolünün en iyi başarım elde ettiği görülmüştür. AODV protokolünün ise küçük ve orta ölçekli ağlarda uygun protokol olduğu anlaşılmıştır. The networks can establish instant and temporary communications between stations without needs to the infrastructure, capable of self-configuration and providing mobility called Ad-hoc networks. Stations in Ad-hoc can create or join to a network anywhere and every time without needs to an infrastructure. To perform the communication between stations will require to routing. Transmitting information packets from source to destination by finding appropriate route rout calculations is accomplished by routing protocols.In this thesis, by using a simulation program to check out the performance of Ad-Hoc On-demand Distance Vector (AODV) protocol, Dynamic Source Routing (DSR) protocol, Optimized Link State Routing (OLSR) protocol, Temporary Ordered Routing Algorithm (TORA) protocol and Graphic Routing Protocol (GRP) protocol in networks contains different number, mobility and immobile nodes with different packet sizes by taking the MANET and wireless network's parameters to compare the performance and efficiency of the running routing protocols in MANET networks. Based on analyzed results of the MANET delay test and Wireless networks (WLAN)'s delay, Media Access Delay, Retransmission and Throughput test parameters, OLSR routing protocol was found to give the best performance while AODV routing protocol was found to give the best performance for small and medium-sized of wireless networks it has proved to be the appropriate routing protocols. 79
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- 2016
5. Solunum yolu enfeksiyonlarında viral patojenler ve mevsimsel dağılımı
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Ahmed, Zainab Hidayat Ahmed, Fındık, Duygu, and Tıbbi Mikrobiyoloji Anabilim Dalı
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Mikrobiyoloji ,Respiration ,Viruses ,Respiratory tract infections ,Pathogens ,Microbiology ,Virus diseases ,Polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Solunum yolu enfeksiyonları tüm dünyada önemli derecede morbidite ve motaliteye neden olurlar ve bu nedenle global sağlık sorunu haline gelmiştir. Tüm dünyada virüslar önde gelen solunum yolu enfeksiyonu etkenlerindendirler. İnsanlardaki solunum yolu hastalıklarında etken virüslar sııklıkla insan respiratuar virüsü (HRSV A/B), insan parainfluenza virüsü (HPIV), influenza A virüs (FLUAV) ve influenza B virüs (FLUBV), insan adenovirüs (HAdV), insan koronavirüs (HCoV), insan rinovirüs (RV), insan metapnömovirüs (HMPV A/B), ve insan bokavirüs (HBoV), insan enterovirüs (EV), insan parechovirüsdur (HPeV) . Bu çalışmada solunum yolu enfeksiyonlarında viral patojenlerin saptanması ve mevsimsel dağılımının araştırılması amaçlanmıştır. Virüsler mültipleks PCR yöntemi ile araştırılmıştır. 2014,2015,2016 mayıs sonu tarihleri arasında 561 hastada 705virüs saptanmış olup, üst solunum yollarında etkenlerin çoğunlukla virüs olduğu ve enfeksiyonların ise kış ve ilkbahar aylarında daha sık görüldüğü anlaşılmıştır. En sık rastlanan etken HRSV A/B olmuştur. ÜSYE'de viral etkenlerin saptanması gereksiz antibiyotik kullanımını engelleyecektir. Respiratory infections cause a significant morbidity and mortality worldwide and this have made these infections a global health concern. Viruses are the leading causes of respiratory disease throughout the world. Causative agents of respiratory disease in humans include human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV A/B), human parainfluenza virus (HPIV), influenza A virus (FLUAV) and influenza B virus (FLUBV), human adenovirus (HAdV), human coronavirus (HCoV), human rhinovirus (RV), human metapneumovirus (HMPV A/B), and human bocavirus (HBoV),human entero virus (EV), human parecho virus (HPeV), have been detected in patients with respiratory infection. Between the years 2014, 2015 and May 2016 we are found 705 viruses in 561 patients includingall age groups. In this study we observed tahat HRSV A/B virusesare the most common viruses that causes upper respiratory tract infections in winter and spring. 95
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- 2016
6. Myxomas and Angiomyxomas of the Orbit
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Norman C. Ahl, Lawrence J. Marentette, Victor M. Elner, Jerman M. Al-Qahtani, Elise Torczynski, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Andrew Flint
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,biology ,business.industry ,CD34 ,Myxoma ,Anatomical pathology ,Vimentin ,medicine.disease ,Ophthalmology ,Vascularity ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Immunohistochemistry ,Histopathology ,medicine.symptom ,Angiomyxoma ,business - Abstract
Purpose To report clinical and histopathologic features and biologic behavior of orbital myxomas and angiomyxomas. Design Noncomparative retrospective case series. Participants Patients with histopathologic diagnoses of orbital myxoma or angiomyxoma. Methods Clinical metadata and features were obtained from the medical record. Neoplasms were studied by routine histopathology, special stains, and immunohistochemistry. Main Outcome Measures Final diagnosis, based on histopathology, special stains, and immunohistochemistry, and clinical course from analysis of metadata and clinical features. Results Three myxomas and 3 angiomyxomas were identified in 5 males and 1 female. Median age at presentation was 56 years (range, 4–69), with a follow-up ranging from 6 months to 8 years. Two angiomyxomas occurred in children ages 4 and 7 years whose tumors were locally aggressive and recurred. Recurrence also complicated one case of myxoma after incomplete excision. Pathologically, the tumors were poorly circumscribed. Histopathology showed them to be hypocellular, containing stellate and spindled cells in an abundant, loose, myxoid stroma rich in hyaluronic acid. Small blood vessels were rare in myxomas but abundant in angiomyxomas. Tumor cells were frequently immunoreactive for vimentin, CD34, and factor XIIIa. Conclusions Myxomas rarely involve orbital tissue, and no angiomyxomas of the region have been previously reported. Angiomyxomas in children may be aggressive. Vascularity and bone involvement appear to be important prognostic features for recurrence. Complete resection with a margin of healthy tissue appears to be the treatment of choice. Tumor cell immunopositivity for vimentin, CD34, and factor XIIIa may assist in the histopathologic diagnosis.
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- 2007
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7. An Immunohistochemical Analysis and Comparison of Posterior Polymorphous Dystrophy With Congenital Hereditary Endothelial Dystrophy
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Ahmed A. Hidayat, Nora V. Laver, Deborah L McCoy, and Glenn C. Cockerham
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Endothelium ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Corneal Dystrophies, Hereditary ,biology ,business.industry ,Endothelium, Corneal ,Mucin-1 ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Infant ,Dystrophy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Child, Preschool ,Immunoenzyme techniques ,Monoclonal ,biology.protein ,Keratins ,Immunohistochemistry ,Female ,Congenital hereditary endothelial dystrophy ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
To evaluate the immunohistochemical profiles of the abnormal endothelial cells of posterior polymorphous dystrophy (PPMD) and congenital hereditary endothelial dystrophy (CHED).Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of seven corneas with the diagnosis of PPMD (seven patients), six corneas with the diagnosis of CHED (four patients), and five control corneas were stained with hematoxylin-eosin. Adjacent histologic sections were stained with monoclonal antibodies that react with pancytokeratin, AE1/AE3, cytokeratin (CK) 7, CK 20, CAM 5.2, and epithelial membrane antigen. The immunoreactivity of the corneal endothelium was assessed by light microscopy.The endothelial cells stained positive for pancytokeratin and CK 7 in seven of seven corneas of patients with PPMD and five of six corneas of patients with CHED; variable positivity was seen to AE1, AE3, and CAM 5.2. The endothelium was uniformly negative to staining by CK 20. The epithelium stained positive with pancytokeratin, AE1, and AE3. All control corneas were negative for pancytokeratin, CK 7, and CK 20.The abnormal endothelium in both PPMD and CHED expresses similar CKs, including CK 7, which is not present in normal endothelium or surface epithelium. This may indicate a shared developmental abnormality in these conditions, as previously suggested by ultrastructural studies and genetic mapping.
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- 2002
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8. Extranodal marginal zone B cell lymphomas of the uvea: an analysis of 13 cases
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Michael Hummel, Harald Stein, Hans-Dieter Foss, Glenn C. Cockerham, Sarah E. Coupland, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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CD20 ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Uveal Neoplasm ,Uvea ,Biology ,Plasma cell ,medicine.disease ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Lymphoma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunophenotyping ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Marginal zone B-cell ,medicine ,biology.protein ,B cell - Abstract
The majority of primary lymphoproliferative lesions of the uvea represent low-grade B cell lymphomas and often display a prominent plasmacellular differentiation. The purpose of the current study was to classify the uveal lymphoproliferations according to the REAL classification; examine the immune profile of the plasmacellular differentiated tumour cells using the plasma cell-related antigens multiple myeloma oncogene-1-protein (MUM1), Vs38c, CD38 and CD138; and to compare this profile with that of mature reactive plasma cells. Following fixation, 13 lymphoproliferative lesions of the uvea were categorized on the basis of their morphology and immunophenotype according to the REAL classification. Included in the immunohistochemistry were B cell-specific activator protein (BSAP), MUM1, Vs38c, CD38 and CD138. Nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was also performed on DNA extracted from paraffin sections for the detection of gene rearrangements of the heavy immunoglobulin chain (IgH). All of the 13 uveal tract lymphoproliferative lesions represented malignant lymphoma of B cell non-Hodgkin type and could be diagnosed as 'extranodal marginal zone B cell lymphomas' (EMZL). The degree of plasmacellular differentiation varied between the tumours. In contrast to their non-plasmacytoid counterparts, the 'plasmacytoid' EMZL tumour cells were negative for the B cell markers CD20 and BSAP, and demonstrated heterogeneous positivity for the markers MUM1, Vs38c, CD38 and CD138. The most consistent marker was MUM1, being observed in all tumours. Co-expression of all plasma cell markers was observed in four (31%) uveal EMZL. Loss of CD138 expression was observed in six (46%) tumours, of Vs38c expression in five (38%) and of CD38 in one (7%) tumour. Although the diagnosis of malignant lymphoma was unequivocally based on morphological and immunophenotypical features, the molecular analysis was able to demonstrate clonal B cell populations in only one uveal EMZL. All uveal lymphoid proliferations investigated represented EMZL, with the corresponding morphology and immunophenotype as seen in EMZL in other extranodal locations. MUM1, followed by CD38 expression, were the most constant plasma cell antigens in the plasmacytoid EMZL tumour cells, with both Vs38c and CD138 positivity being lost in many tumours. Aberrant immune profiles of plasma cell-related antigens may be of help in the establishment of malignancy in uveal lymphoproliferative lesions, particularly where interpretation of light chain expression and/or PCR results is difficult.
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- 2002
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9. Clinicopathologic Evaluation of the Mueller Muscle in Thyroid-Associated Orbitopathy
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Ahmed A. Hidayat, Kimberly P. Cockerham, Glenn C. Cockerham, Henry G. Brown, and Scott R. Graner
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Inflammation ,Masson's trichrome stain ,Fibrosis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Mast Cells ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Mast cell ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Graves Disease ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oculomotor Muscles ,Eyelid Diseases ,Leukocyte Common Antigens ,Female ,Surgery ,Histopathology ,Eyelid ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Immunostaining - Abstract
Purpose: To study the histopathologic features of the Mueller muscle in chronic eyelid retraction caused by thyroid-associated orbitopathy. To investigate if the degree of eyelid retraction correlates with any histopathologic finding. Methods: A prospective case series of 23 consecutive patients with thyroid-associated orbitopathy was studied. Specimens were obtained during a standard muellerectomy. Formalin-preserved specimens were studied with the use of hematoxylin-eosin, periodic acid-Schiff, Masson trichrome, and Giemsa stains. Immunostaining against leukocyte common antigen, L26, CD3, and KP-1 was performed. Three control specimens were also evaluated in a similar fashion. Fresh tissue was placed in cold glutaraldehyde overnight, postfixed, dehydrated, and infiltrated with epoxy resin. Silver (70 nm) sections were cut and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate for electron microscopic examination. Results: On light microscopy, fibrosis and mast cell infiltration was present in all 23 specimens. Fat infiltration was noted in 16 of 23 specimens and did not correlate with increasing age of the patient. Interstitial edema and lymphocytic infiltration were not observed. On immunohistochemistry, leukocyte common antigen was positive, confirming the presence of inflammation. L26, CD3, and KP1 were negative. Electron microscopy demonstrated fibrosis, mast cells, and abundant contracting Mueller cells. The degree of clinical retraction in millimeters did not correlate with fibrosis, inflammation, or fat infiltration. The control specimens demonstrated rare fat and mast cell infiltration and no fibrosis. Conclusions: Contrary to previous reports, the Mueller muscle is involved in the inflammation and fibrosis that characterizes thyroid-associated orbitopathy. The Mueller muscle is grossly enlarged. On histopathologic inspection, fibrosis, fatty infiltration, and increased mast cell presence accompany focal atrophy of the Mueller muscle. In concordance with prior descriptions, many Mueller cells are in an actively contracting state on electron microscopy.
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- 2002
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10. Endogenous mycotic endophthalmitis: variations in clinical and histopathologic changes in candidiasis compared with aspergillosis
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Ahmed A. Hidayat and Narsing A. Rao
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Enucleation ,Retinitis ,Aspergillosis ,Eye Enucleation ,Retina ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Endophthalmitis ,medicine ,Humans ,Pigment Epithelium of Eye ,Mycosis ,Aged ,Candida ,Retrospective Studies ,Choroid ,business.industry ,Candidiasis ,Retinal Vessels ,Middle Aged ,Eye infection ,medicine.disease ,Vitreous Body ,Ophthalmology ,Aspergillus ,Intraocular Infection ,Female ,Histopathology ,sense organs ,business ,Eye Infections, Fungal - Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe clinical and/or histopathologic features that could help distinguish endogenous Candida endophthalmitis from endogenous Aspergillus intraocular inflammation and to provide histologic documentation of intraocular spread of these agents. METHODS: Twenty-five patients who underwent enucleation, 13 with morphologic features and/or positive culture for Aspergillus and 12 with histologic evidence and/or positive culture for Candida were included in the study. Clinical information was sought from each case. Patients with AIDS were excluded. The enucleated globes were analyzed to detect location of the fungi, vascular invasion by these agents, and inflammatory response. RESULTS: Candida endophthalmitis was noted in patients with a history of gastrointestinal surgery, hyperalimentation, or diabetes mellitus, whereas aspergillosis was present in patients who had undergone organ transplantation or cardiac surgery. Histopathologically, the vitreous was the primary focus of infection for Candida, whereas subretinal/subretinal pigment epithelium infection was noted in eyes with aspergillosis. Retinal and choroidal vessel wall invasion by fungal elements was noted in cases of aspergillosis but not in cases with candidiasis. Both infectious agents induced suppurative nongranulomatous inflammation. CONCLUSIONS: Unlike Candida endophthalmitis, aspergillosis clinically presents with extensive areas of deep retinitis/choroiditis, and vitreous biopsy may not yield positive results. Histopathologically, it appears that Aspergillus grows preferentially along subretinal pigment epithelium and subretinal space. This intraocular infection is usually associated with a high rate of mortality caused by cerebral and cardiac complications.
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- 2001
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11. Primary graft failure
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Zong-Mei Sheng, Karen E. Bijwaard, Glenn C. Cockerham, Ian W. McLean, Ramon L. Font, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Necrosis ,Endothelium ,business.industry ,viruses ,medicine.disease_cause ,eye diseases ,Herpesviridae ,Virus ,law.invention ,Ophthalmology ,Herpes simplex virus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,law ,Cornea ,Immunology ,medicine ,Immunohistochemistry ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Objective Primary graft failure (PGF) corneal tissues were analyzed for herpes simplex virus (HSV) and varicella–zoster virus (VZV). Design Retrospective, noncomparative case series. Materials Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue of 21 donor corneas and 14 recipient corneas of PGF cases, as well as 10 control corneas. Methods Clinical, histologic, immunohistochemical, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and, in selected cases, transmission electron microscopic characteristics were studied. Main outcome measures Evidence of HSV or VZV in donor tissues. Results Median patient age was 65 years, and median donor age was 48 years. Donor cornea parameters, including endothelial cell counts, death-to-preservation time, and time in storage, were generally within accepted standards. Stromal edema was found in all 21 donor corneas with PGF. Eighteen donor corneas demonstrated severely reduced or absent endothelium and mild to moderate lymphocytic infiltration without necrosis. Three donor corneas (14%) had necrotizing stromal keratitis (NSK) with keratic precipitates. Positive immunohistochemical staining of keratocytes for HSV was present in two of two donor corneas with NSK and was negative in 18 other donor corneas. Polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed the DNA of HSV type 1 (HSV1) in all donor corneas with NSK and in four donor corneas without NSK (33%). Recipient corneal tissue was negative for HSV1 DNA in three patients with NSK and positive in two of the four other PCR-positive patients. Transmission electron microscopy analysis showed viral particles in two donor corneas with NSK. Polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed no evidence of HSV type 2 or VZV in any cornea. All control corneas were negative for viral DNA. Sixteen corneas remained clear and two had failed after regraft for PGF, with a median follow-up of 3.6 years. Conclusions Herpes simplex virus type 1 DNA was present in 33% of patients of PGF. Herpetic stromal keratitis was found in some failed corneas; the lack of HSV in the paired recipient suggests importation within the donor cornea. The overall prognosis for regrafting after PGF is good.
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- 2000
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12. Re-evaluation of 'reactive lymphoid hyperplasia of the uvea' 1 1The opinions and assertions contained herein are the private views of the authors and are not to be construed as the views of the Department of the Air Force, Department of the Army, or the Department of Defense
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Karen E. Bijwaard, Zong-Mei Sheng, Glenn C. Cockerham, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Enucleation ,Uvea ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Lymphoid hyperplasia ,Lymphoma ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ciliary body ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,Immunohistochemistry ,Choroid ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objective Cases of uveal lymphoid proliferation previously classified as reactive lymphoid hyperplasia (RLH) were studied to correlate pathologic features with clinical outcome. Design Retrospective case series. Participants Ten cases of RLH of the uvea on file at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology with sufficient formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue for analysis. Methods Clinical, histologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular (polymerase chain reaction [PCR]) characteristics of uveal lymphoid proliferations were studied. Main outcome measures Morphologic, immunohistochemical, and PCR characteristics of study cases. Results Patient age ranged from 40 to 73 years at time of enucleation, with a mean age of 55 years. Retinal detachment was noted clinically in nine patients and glaucoma in eight. All patients were treated with enucleation, and three received radiotherapy. Histologically, two cases were interpreted as RLH and eight were well-differentiated small-cell lymphoma (WDSCL). Systemic lymphoid infiltrate developed in two patients, but there were no deaths with a mean follow-up of 9.9 years. Mature lymphocytes were noted in the iris and angle structures; the atypical cells of uveal lymphoma were found in the choroid and ciliary body. Eight cases were monoclonal by B-cell and T-cell markers and/or immunoglobulin light chain restriction. Amplifiable DNA was present in 6 of 10 cases by PCR. Three cases monoclonal by cell markers were also monoclonal by PCR, but two cases monoclonal by cell markers could not be confirmed by PCR. Lymphoid follicles with germinal centers were found in two cases of RLH and five cases of WDSCL. Nine specimens demonstrated extraocular lymphoid involvement of the episclera and orbit; most appeared more benign morphologically than the choroidal infiltrates. Extraocular infiltrates of WDSCL were monoclonal by immunohistochemistry in five cases, polyclonal in one case, and indeterminate in two cases. Conclusions Most cases (8 of 10) previously described as RLH were low-grade B-cell lymphomas histologically and by immunohistochemistry. PCR results agreed with histologic diagnosis in four of six cases. Open-angle glaucoma was common and related mostly to lymphocytic infiltration of the angle structures. Extraocular involvement is common but may not be representative of the choroidal lesion. Prognosis is excellent in low-grade uveal lymphoid neoplasia.
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- 2000
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13. The Clinical Spectrum of Schwannomas Presenting With Visual Dysfunction
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Richard D. Stutzman, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Mark H. Depper, John S. Kennerdell, Kimberly P. Cockerham, Roger E. Turbin, and Glenn C. Cockerham
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Neurilemoma ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Cranial nerves ,Schwannoma ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Hemangioma ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Superior orbital fissure ,Peripheral nervous system ,medicine ,Optic nerve ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Schwannomas (neurilemomas) are benign tumors that arise from Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system. The most commonly involved nerves that cause neuro-ophthalmic manifestations are cranial nerves V and VIII. In this series of three women, schwannomas presented as intraconal masses that mimicked a cavernous hemangioma, a superior orbital mass transgressing the superior orbital fissure, and an expansive frontal lobe mass with clinical symptoms and signs of increased intracranial pressure. Although all three complained of visual blurring, none of our patients presented with Vth or VIIIth cranial nerve dysfunction. Histopathologic studies demonstrated well-circumscribed, encapsulated spindle-cell lesions with classic Antoni A and B patterns. Histopathologic examination is essential to confirm the diagnosis of a schwannoma that may be otherwise clinically confusing. Direct optic nerve compression, globe indentation with induced hyperopia, or increased intracranial pressure with optic nerve compromise may be responsible for visual symptoms. A multidisciplinary approach is often required because of the size and location of schwannomas.
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- 1999
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14. Chrysosporium parvum Keratomycosis
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Michael D. Wagoner, Ihsan A. Badr, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Ophthalmology - Published
- 1999
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15. Scleritis
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Narsing A. Rao, Widiarti P Riono, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Autoimmune disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Eye disease ,medicine.disease ,Ophthalmology ,Rheumatoid arthritis ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Goodpasture syndrome ,Histopathology ,Sarcoidosis ,business ,Scleritis - Abstract
Objective By a clinicopathologic study, to evaluate the histopathologic features associated with various causes of scleritis. Design Retrospective observational case series. Participants Enucleated globes or biopsy specimens obtained from 55 cases of clinically diagnosed necrotizing scleritis. Methods On the basis of their histologic appearance, these cases were divided into four morphologic groups: (1) zonal necrotizing granulomatous scleral inflammation; (2) nonzonal diffuse scleral inflammation, with or without granulomatous process; (3) necrotizing inflammation with microabscesses, with or without evidence of micro-organisms in the section studied; and (4) sarcoidal granulomatous inflammation. The clinical charts were reviewed for the presence of any associated disease. Results There were 14 (25.4%) cases in the first group; 12 had clinical evidence of systemic autoimmune diseases, including 8 cases of rheumatoid arthritis and 1 each of polychondritis, Goodpasture syndrome, Wegener granulomatosis, and collagen vascular disease; of the remaining 2 cases, 1 patient had a history of herpes zoster ophthalmicus, and the other had no history of any systemic autoimmune or infectious disease. None of the 19 (34.5%) patients characteristic of group 2 had any history of systemic autoimmune or infectious disease. Eleven of the 21 (38.2%) patients in group 3 had infections, including Pseudomonas spp., gram-positive cocci, Haemophilus spp., Actinomyces spp., and fungi; in the 10 remaining cases, no micro-organisms could be detected. The one case in group 4 was diagnosed as sarcoidosis. Conclusions On the basis of their histologic features, rheumatoid scleritis and related systemic autoimmune-mediated necrotizing scleral inflammations could be differentiated from either idiopathic or infectious scleritis; however, the histologic features of rheumatoid scleritis were similar to those of necrotizing scleritis associated with other systemic autoimmune diseases.
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- 1999
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16. Pleomorphic adenocarcinomas of the ciliary epithelium
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Nora Laver, Juan O Croxatto, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Basement membrane ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Vimentin ,medicine.disease ,Epithelium ,Masson's trichrome stain ,Ophthalmology ,Cytokeratin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ciliary body ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Adenocarcinoma ,business ,Amelanotic melanoma - Abstract
Objective To examine the immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features of the rare pleomorphic adenocarcinomas of the ciliary epithelium (CE). Design Retrospective case series. Participants The study materials included 12 cases of adenocarcinoma of the ciliary epithelium: 9 cases of CE hyperplasia and 3 cases of CE adenomas. Intervention Histologic sections were stained with hematoxylin-eosin, alcian blue, periodic acid-Schiff, and occasionally with Masson trichrome. Additionally, the following immunohistochemical markers were used: Kermix (ae1/ae3 + ck1), cytokeratin 7 (CK7), cytokeratin 20 (CK20), epithelial membrane antigen, CAM 5.2, S-100 protein, neuron-specific enolase, glial fibrillary acid protein, smooth muscle actin, and vimentin. Five lesions were studied ultrastructurally. Clinical data were available in all cases, and follow-up was obtained in 9 of the 12 patients. Results Nine tumors occurred in phthisical eyes in adults. The tumor cells were arranged in tubular and solid patterns and surrounded by thick basement membrane (BM) material and fibrous stroma. Immunohistochemistry (IM) of adenocarcinomas showed positivity with kermix (8 of 12 lesions), CAM 5.2 (7 of 12), and CK7 (5 of 12). Ultrastructurally, the tumor cells were surrounded by a thick, homogeneous, and/or multilaminar BM and attached to each other by junctional complexes. Conclusions Clinically, this intraocular neoplasm should be considered in adults with a longstanding blind eye with an epibulbar mass and/or proptosis of recent duration. Fatal cases only occurred in tumors with extraocular extension. Adenocarcinomas of CE should be differentiated from amelanotic melanoma and metastatic lesions by the presence of a thick BM material around the tumor cells and intraocular fibrosis. Immunohistochemistry is helpful in differentiating from melanomas but not helpful in cases of metastatic carcinomas.
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- 1999
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17. LANGERHANS' CELL HISTIOCYTOSIS AND JUVENILE XANTHOGRANULOMA OF THE ORBIT
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Mahmood F. Mafee, Samir Noujaim, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Nora V. Laver
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Juvenile xanthogranuloma ,business.industry ,Group ii ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Mr imaging ,Histiocytosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Langerhans cell histiocytosis ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Histiocyte ,Orbit (anatomy) - Abstract
The clinical, radiologic, and histopathologic features of two main disorders of the orbit are discussed. Group I, Langerhans cell histiocytosis (histiocytosis X, Class I), is caused by proliferation of X histiocytic Langerhans' cells. Group II is juvenile xanthogranuloma, and Class II is related to the proliferation of non-X histiocytic (monocyte-macrophage) cells. The two diseases are of unknown cause and differ in their clinical, radiologic, and histopathologic features.
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- 1998
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18. Glandular Tumors of the Lacrimal Sac
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Michael Ilsar, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Jacob Pe' er, Mary A. Stefanyszyn, and Louis Landau
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Nasolacrimal duct ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Adenoid ,Lacrimal sac ,Epithelium ,Ophthalmology ,Serous fluid ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Histopathology ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Abstract
Purpose: To describe and characterize the primary lacrimal sac epithelial tumors of glandular origin, and to describe their possible source from glands in the lacrimal sac and nasolacrimal duct walls. Methods: The authors conducted a clinicopathologic study on 14 patients with epithelial lacrimal sac tumors of possible glandular origin. In addition, they reviewed 35 surgical specimens of the lacrimal sac and nasolacrimal duct region and 13 cadaver specimens of the lacrimal sac region. Results: Six of the tumors were benign: four were oncocytomas and two were pleomorphic adenomas. Eight of the tumors were malignant: three were oncocytic adenocarcinomas, three were adenoid cystic carcinomas, and two were adenocarcinomas. All tumors were from adults, ranging in age from 38 to 87 years. Twenty-eight of the 47 specimens of lacrimal sac and nasolacrimal duct region showed mixed glands of serous and mucous elements. Conclusions: Although rare, benign and malignant glandular lacrimal sac tumors should be considered in the differential diagnosis of lacrimal sac obstruction. Their possible origin is from the normal glands that exist under the lacrimal sac and nasolacrimal duct epithelium.
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- 1996
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19. Ki-1 positive large cell lymphoma of the orbit
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Barrett G. Haik, Darryl J. Ainbinder, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,CD30 ,business.industry ,CD3 ,Large-cell lymphoma ,medicine.disease ,Lymphoma ,Lesion ,Ophthalmology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Rhabdomyosarcoma ,Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma ,Histiocyte - Abstract
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) positive for the cell marker Ki-1/CD30 is a recently recognized high grade lymphoma. The authors present a case of a three-year-old female child with a rapidly growing sino-orbital lesion with central nervous system extension, suggestive of rhabdomyosarcoma. The child presented a clinical challenge for prompt diagnosis and treatment.Histologically, the unusual tumor showed a mixture of large malignant lymphocytes and histiocytes. Immunohistochemically, the malignant lymphocytes showed positive reactivity to LCA, Ki-1, CD3, UCHL-1. The histiocytes were positive for KP-1 and lysozyme.There was complete resolution of the lymphoma. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first case of Ki-1+ ALCL lymphoma involving the orbit of a child.
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- 1996
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20. Carcinoma of the ciliary epithelium presenting as orbital cellulitis
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Kamal Kishore, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Joseph A. Mauriello, and Celso Tello
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Basement membrane ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Ciliary epithelium ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ciliary body ,Biopsy ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,sense organs ,Orbital cellulitis ,business ,Orbit (anatomy) - Abstract
A 75-year-old man developed apparent acute left-sided orbital cellulitis over a three-day period. The vision in the left eye had gradually deteriorated to no light perception over four years. A superonasal epibulbar mass on clinical examination corresponded to the orbital computed tomographic finding of a soft-tissue density that extended through a large scleral defect. Biopsy of the mass was interpreted as consistent with malignant melanoma of the ciliary body with extrascleral extension. Because of gross proptosis due to extrascleral extension of the 'tumor' and persistent pain, a left orbital exenteration was performed. Pathologic examination revealed a partially necrotic tumor that filled the eye and extended through a large scleral defect into the orbit. Polygonal epithelioid and tumor spindle cells with marked nuclear pleomorphism were negative for immunohistologic markers for HMG-45 and S-100 protein and were surrounded by a basement membrane consistent with carcinoma of the nonpigmented ciliary bo...
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- 1996
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21. Solitary juvenile xanthogranuloma of the orbit
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Don Perez, Blaise E. Favara, Jorge G. Arroyo, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Orestes Borrego
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Juvenile xanthogranuloma ,business.industry ,Black male ,Anatomy ,Orbital lesion ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Touton giant cell ,medicine ,business ,Pathological ,Orbit (anatomy) - Abstract
The clinical and pathological findings in a five month-old black male infant with an orbital lesion are reported. By light microscopy, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy the tumor was diagnosed as juvenile xanthogranuloma. Touton giant cells were rare and only two were found when serial sections were made. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this represents the eighth case reported in the English literature.
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- 1996
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22. Orbital Hemangioblastoma Arising in a Rectus Muscle
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Henry G. Brown, David M. Sachs, Kimberly P. Cockerham, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Glenn C. Cockerham
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Conjunctival injection ,genetic structures ,Eye disease ,Extraocular muscles ,Hemangioblastoma ,medicine ,Humans ,Orbital imaging ,Aged ,business.industry ,Rectus muscle ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oculomotor Muscles ,Orbital Neoplasms ,Female ,Surgery ,sense organs ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Orbit ,Orbit (anatomy) - Abstract
We describe the clinical and histologic features of the first case, to our knowledge, of hemangioblastoma of the orbit arising from an extraocular muscle. We examined a 73-year-old woman with conjunctival injection, 2 mm of proptosis, and limitation of abduction of the right eye. A medial-lateral orbitotomy was used to approach the medial rectus enlargement noted on orbital imaging. Histopathologic examination with light microscopy and immunohistochemistry demonstrated the characteristic findings of a hemangioblastoma.
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- 2003
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23. Nonepithelial Tumors of the Lacrimal Sac
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J. Peʼer, Mary A. Stefanyszyn, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fibrous histiocytomas ,Adolescent ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurofibroma ,Child ,Aged ,Hemangiopericytoma ,Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases ,business.industry ,Eye Neoplasms ,Melanoma ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Lipoma ,medicine.disease ,Lacrimal sac ,Bloody ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Surgery ,Sarcoma ,business - Abstract
Lacrimal sac tumors are rare and mostly of epithelial origin. We conducted a clinicopathologic study of 35 cases of nonepithelial tumors of the lacrimal sac. These tumors included 13 fibrous histiocytomas, one hemangiopericytoma, one lipoma, ten lymphoid lesions, eight malignant melanomas, one granulocytic sarcoma, and one neurofibroma. Except for one 9-year-old child with fibrous histiocytoma, all neoplasms involved adults (age range, 27 to 90 years). The most common initial signs and symptoms were epiphora, chronic inflammation, or lacrimal mass. A bloody nasal discharge and bleeding from the punctum occurred in a patient with malignant melanoma. In none of the patients was the clinical diagnosis of a lacrimal sac tumor made preoperatively. Some of the nonepithelial neoplasms of the lacrimal sac can be life-threatening; therefore, early diagnosis and treatment are important.
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- 1994
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24. Lipofuscinosis of the Cornea
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Ahmed A. Hidayat, Curtis E. Margo, Ian North, and Joseph A. Mauriello
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Stromal cell ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,eye diseases ,Staining ,Lipofuscin ,Pathogenesis ,Neovascularization ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Stroma ,Cornea ,Ultrastructure ,Medicine ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background: Lipofuscin pigments are the indigestible residue of lysosomal activity usually associated with normal aging. Abnormal amounts of lipofuscin also are associated with certain disease processes. The rarity of lipofuscin in the cornea and the similarities between its staining properties and those of intracellular micro-organisms caused great diagnostic problems in three cases. The correct diagnosis of corneal lipofuscinosis was made after extensive histochemical, autofluorescent, and ultrastructural studies. Methods: Clinical histories of three patients are correlated with morphologic and histochemical findings on five corneal buttons with lipofuscinosis. Results: The histopathologic features of one cornea with chronic keratitis and three corneas from two patients with bilateral opacities of undetermined origin were mostly similar. Large amounts of lipofuscin pigment were found within macrophages and stromal keratocytes. Other pathologic findings were nonspecific, including phagocytosis of degenerated collagen fibrils, scarring, and neovascularization of the stroma. Conclusion: The lipofuscin deposits are probably the consequence of a corneal degenerative process and not its cause, although their pathogenesis remains unclear. Familiarity with the morphologic appearance of corneal lipofuscinosis and its staining and autofluorescent properties is important because the small, 1- to 3-μm deposits may be mistaken for intracellular micro-organisms.
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- 1992
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25. Novel corneal phenotype in a patient with alport syndrome
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Kraig S. Bower, Melvin E. Wagner, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Thomas P. Ward, and Jayson D Edwards
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Collagen Type IV ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Corneal Stroma ,Visual Acuity ,Corneal dystrophy ,Nephritis, Hereditary ,medicine ,Humans ,Alport syndrome ,Corneal Dystrophies, Hereditary ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Corneal Topography ,Middle Aged ,Corneal topography ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Phenotype ,Immunohistochemistry ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Nephritis - Abstract
To report the clinical and histopathologic findings of an unusual keratopathy, which may represent a new corneal dystrophy in a patient with Alport syndrome (ATS).A 59-year-old woman with longstanding diagnosis of autosomal recessive ATS was evaluated for progressively decreasing vision in the left eye. She had anterior lenticonus and cataract and central corneal stromal opacification with significant thinning and flattening bilaterally. She underwent penetrating keratoplasty and cataract extraction with posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation. We describe the light microscopic and ultrastructural findings from the cornea.Histopathology of the corneal button revealed marked stromal thinning with decreased keratocytes. The endothelial cells were attenuated and focally lost. Immunohistochemical stains for cytokeratin were positive, findings consistent with posterior polymorphous dystrophy (PPMD). Transmission electron microscopy showed necrosis and a marked loss of keratocytes. Multilayering of the endothelium was consistent with PPMD, but mature desmosomes and microvilli were absent. In vivo confocal microscopy on the fellow eye showed linear hyporeflective bands at the level of Descemet's membrane consistent with PPMD. In addition, there were fine linear changes in the deep stroma and diffuse hyperreflectivity of the mid and superficial stroma with lack of identifiable keratocytes throughout.We believe this to be the first reported case to demonstrate some histopathologic features of PPMD in ATS. However, the clinical, histopathologic, and ultrastructural characteristics are not typical of PPMD. This may represent a new phenotypic expression of PPMD or may be a distinct clinicopathologic dystrophy associated with ATS.
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- 2009
26. Dracunculiasis of the Orbit and Eyelid
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Miguel Burnier, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Ronald C. Neafie
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dracunculiasis ,business.industry ,Helminthiasis ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Lesion ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Dermoid cyst ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,sense organs ,Eyelid ,medicine.symptom ,Abscess ,business ,Dracunculus medinensis ,Orbit (anatomy) - Abstract
Dracunculiasis, an infection caused by the nematode parasite, Dracunculus medinensis , usually affects the skin and subcutaneous tissue. The authors studied two cases of dracunculiasis involving the orbit and eyelid in African children. In the first case, the patient presented with proptosis and the clinical diagnosis was Burkitt's lymphoma. In the second patient, the eyelid lesion was diagnosed as a dermoid cyst. Histopathologically, the orbital lesion showed a degenerated and partially calcified worm within a large intraconal abscess. The eyelid lesion contained a well-preserved gravid female worm filled with larvae. The results of transmission and scanning electron microscopic studies are discussed.
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- 1991
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27. Climatic Droplet Keratopathy with Corneal Amyloidosis
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James A. Cameron, Khalid F. Tabbara, Camille S. Matta, Ali A. Al-Rajhi, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Climate ,Eye disease ,Cataract Extraction ,Corneal Diseases ,Degenerative disease ,Stroma ,Cornea ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Amyloidosis ,Dystrophy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Trachoma ,Lattice degeneration ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Keratoplasty, Penetrating - Abstract
Climatic droplet keratopathy (CDK) is a degenerative disease of the cornea, highly prevalent in Saudi Arabia. It is characterized by aggregates of small, golden-yellow globules that accumulate in the subepithelial layers, Bowman's layer, and the superficial stroma of the cornea. The authors report on 22 patients (40 eyes) with CDK and lattice lines in the cornea. The condition occurred late in life (mean age, 67 years). It was bilateral in 82% of patients, with no family history of lattice dystrophy or systemic amyloidosis. These lines were found in all layers of the stroma. Results of histopathologic and electron microscopic examination of the lattice lines confirmed the presence of amyloid. Results of immunohistochemical examination showed evidence of deposition of AP protein. The cause of these deposits in the cornea is not known, but the authors speculate that environmental factors causing CDK also may play a role in the deposition of protein AP in the cornea. The contribution of trachoma to the degenerative changes in the cornea and secondary amyloidosis could not be ruled out, as all patients had inactive trachoma. Climatic droplet keratopathy with corneal amyloidosis, therefore, represents a form of "lattice degeneration" of the cornea.
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- 1991
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28. Adult onset primary bilateral orbital xanthogranuloma: Clinical, diagnostic, and histopathologic correlations
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Thomas E. Johnson, Amin M. Nasr, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Low grade lymphoma ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Erdheim–Chester disease ,Medicine ,Inflammatory pseudotumor ,business ,Organ system - Abstract
Juvenile or infantile xanthogranuloma is a known entity with dermatologic, ocular and systemic involvement. The orbital form is quite rare and is usually associated with other systemic manifestations. Isolated bilateral orbital involvement is known to occur in adults in association with generalized bone involvement and other organ systems as part of the Erdheim-Chester disease syndrome. Primary adult onset bilateral orbital xanthogranuloma not associated with other organ system involvement or dermatologic manifestations, is unusual and should be distinguished from other chronic orbital disorders, such as inflammatory pseudotumor, low grade lymphoma, and infectious orbitopathies. The authors present a case of primary adult onset bilateral orbital xanthogranuloma in a 38-year-old female with painless, progressive bilateral proptosis of 16 years' duration. To our knowledge this is the first case of its kind reported in the ophthalmic literature.
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- 1991
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29. Chronic granulomatous disease presenting as retinal mass
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Rola N. Hamam, Mays Al Dairy, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Ahmad M. Mansour
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Retinitis ,Case Report ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Tuberculous meningitis ,eye diseases ,Chronic granulomatous disease ,Biopsy ,Medicine ,Sarcoidosis ,Fever of unknown origin ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Abstract
1-year-old girl was admitted for fever of unknown origin. Funduscopy revealed juxtapapillary retinal inflammatory mass in one eye with a differential diagnosis of sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, retinoblastoma or metastatic disease. Retinal biopsy showed necrotizing granulomatous retinitis. Extensive workup and therapeutic trials failed to confirm the diagnosis of tuberculosis or sarcoidosis. Her 7-month brother and 4-year-old male cousin presented with nystagmus, poor vision, paravascular pigmentary changes and were initially diagnosed as recessive retinal dystrophy. The girl died at age 2 from tuberculous meningitis and the boys had recurrent tuberculous and Aspergillus infections. Awareness of the typical fundus findings in chronic granulomatous disease allows early diagnosis of the disorder.
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- 2008
30. Intraocular Lymphoproliferations Simulating Uveitis
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John A. Gonzales, Chi-Chao Chan, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ophthalmology ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Uveitis - Published
- 2008
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31. Eyelid Tumors of Apocrine, Eccrine, and Pilar Origins
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Ahmed A. Hidayat, I. Rand Rodgers, and Frederick A. Jakobiec
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Apocrine ,Medicine ,Eyelid ,business - Published
- 2008
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32. Unusual Eyelid Tumors
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Dale R. Meyer, Frederick A. Jakobiec, Joseph W. Sassani, David M. Mills, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Eyelid ,business ,Dermatology - Published
- 2008
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33. List of Contributors
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Juan-Carlos Abad, Mark B Abelson, David H Abramson, Martin A Acquadro, Anthony P Adamis, Wesley H Adams, Natalie A Afshari, Everett Ai, Lloyd M Aiello, Lloyd P Aiello, Levent Akduman, Marissa L Albano, Daniel M. Albert, Terry J Alexandrou, Eduardo C Alfonso, Jorge L Alié, Hassan Alizadeh, Ibrahim A Al Jadaan, Sabah Al-Jastaneiah, Calliope E Allen, David Allen, Robert C Allen, Albert Alm, Samar Al-Swailem, Abigail K Alt, Michael M Altaweel, Russell Anderson, Christopher M Andreoli, Sofia Androudi, Leonard PK Ang, Fahd Anzaar, David J Apple, Claudia A Arrigg, Pablo Artal, Penny Asbell, George K Asdourian, Neal Atebara, Pelin Atmaca-Sonmez, Isabelle Audo, Gerd U Auffarth, Robin K Avery, Dimitri T Azar, Ann S Baker, Mark Balles, Scott D Barnes, Donald M Barnett, Neal P Barney, Fina C Barouch, George B Bartley, Jason JS Barton, Irmgard Behlau, Jose I Belda, Jeffrey L Bennett, Timothy J Bennett, Gregg J Berdy, Carlo Roberto Bernardino, Vitaliano Bernardino, Eliot L Berson, Amitabh Bharadwaj, Robert Bhisitkul, Ravinder D Bhui, Jurij Bilyk, Valérie Biousse, Alan C Bird, Norman Paul Blair, Barbara A Blodi, Mark S Blumenkranz, H Culver Boldt, Mark S Borchert, Luigi Borrillo, Gary E Borodic, S Arthur Boruchoff, Swaraj Bose, Michael E Boulton, RW Bowman, Elizabeth A Bradley, Periklis D Brazitikos, Robert Breeze, Neil M Bressler, Susan B Bressler, Alfred Brini, Donald L Budenz, Angela N Buffenn, Scott E Burk, Salim Butrus, David Callanan, J Douglas Cameron, Louis B Cantor, William A Cantore, Jorge Cantu-Dibildox, Victoria Casas, Miriam Casper, Robin J Casten, Yara P Catoira, Jerry Cavallerano, Samantha J Chai, Maria R Chalita, Sherman M Chamberlain, Audrey S Chan, Chi-Chao Chan, Paul Chan, Matthew J Chapin, Karen L Chapman, Eric Chen, Joe Chen, Julie A Chen, Teresa C Chen, Zhou Chen, Patricia Chévez-Barrios, Emily Y Chew, Mark Chiang, James Chodosh, Eva-Marie Chong, Denise Chun, Leo T Chylack, Antonio P Ciardella, Mortimer Civan, Liane Clamen, John I Clark, Glenn Cockerham, Andre Cohen, Elisabeth J Cohen, Kathryn A Colby, Anne L Coleman, Hanna R Coleman, Joseph Colin, J Michael Collier, Grant M Comer, M Ronan Conlon, Kim E Cooper, James J Corbett, Miguel C Coma, Marshall N Cyrlin, Linda R Dagi, Matthew A Dahlgren, Timothy J Daley, Andrea P Da Mata, Bertil Damato, Donald J D'Amico, Reza Dana, Aude Danan-Husson, Helen B Danesh-Meyer, Ronald P Danis, Jason K Darlington, Stefanie L Davidson, Janet L Davis, Elizabeth A Davis, Jose J de la Cruz, Adam G de la Garza, Margaret M DeAngelis, Sheri L DeMartelaere, Joseph L Demer, Avninder Dhaliwal, J Paul Dieckert, Diana V Do, Marshall G Doane, Christopher Dodds, Claes H Dohlman, Guy Donati, Eric D Donnenfeld, Arlene Drack, Thaddeus P Dryja, David Dueker, Jay S Duker, Jennifer A Dunbar, James P Dunn, William J Dupps, Marlene L Durand, Jonathan J Dutton, Chiara M Eandi, Deepak P Edward, Robert A Egan, David A Eichenbaum, Susan E Eklund, Elizabeth C Engle, Kristine Erickson, Bita Esmaeli, Aaron Fay, Leonard Feiner, Sharon Fekrat, Frederick L Ferris, Howard F Fine, Donald C Fletcher, Paul Flikier, Richard P Floyd, Harry W Flynn, Donald S Fong, Ramon L Font, Brian JR Forbes, Rod Foroozan, Bradley S Foster, C Stephen Foster, Jill A Foster, Gary N Foulks, Tamara R Fountain, Gregory M Fox, Thomas F Freddo, Sharon F Freedman, K Bailey Freund, Thomas R Friberg, Alan H Friedman, David Friedman, Deborah I Friedman, Ephraim Friedman, Arthur D Fu, Anne B Fulton, Ahmed Galal, Steven Galetta, Mark Gallardo, Brenda Gallie, Alec Garner, James A Garrity, Damien Gatinel, Steven J Gedde, Craig E Geist, Steve Gerber, Ramon C Ghanem, Jon P Gieser, Michael S Gilmore, Howard V Gimbel, Ilene K Gipson, Tyrone Glover, Robert A Goldberg, Mordechai Goldenfeld, Scott M Goldstein, Cintia F Gomi, Haiyan Gong, John A Gonzales, John Goosey, Justin L Gottlieb, Joshua Gould, Evangelos S Gragoudas, David B Granet, Michael J Greaney, Daniel G Green, Franz Grehn, Jack V Greiner, Craig M Greven, Gregory J Griepentrog, Carl Groenewald, Cynthia L Grosskreutz, Lori Latowski Grover, Vamsi K Gullapalli, Padma Gulur, Jonathan Gunther, Manish Gupta, Mayank Gupta, David R Guyer, Darin R Haivala, Julia A Haller, GM Halmagyi, Lawrence S Halperin, Islam M Hamdi, Steven R Hamilton, Kristin M Hammersmith, Dennis P Han, Ronald M Hansen, J William Harbour, Seenu M Hariprasad, Mona Harissi-Dagher, Shirin E. Hassan, Mark P Hatton, Pamela Hawley, Yasutaka Hayashida, John R Heckenlively, Thomas R Hedges, Alfred D Heggie, Katrinka L Heher, Jeffrey S Heier, J Fielding Hejtmancik, Bonnie A Henderson, Peter S Hersh, Ahmed A Hidayat, Eva Juliet Higginbotham, Tatsuo Hirose, Allen C Ho, ThucAnh T Ho, R Nick Hogan, David E Holck, Nancy M Holekamp, Peter G Hovland, Thomas C Hsu, William C Hsu, Andrew JW Huang, Mark S Hughes, Jennifer Hui, David G Hunter, Laryssa A Huryn, Deeba Husain, Robert A Hyndiuk, Michael Ip, Brian J Jacobs, Frederick A Jakobiec, Lee M Jampol, Harold G Jensen, Fei Ji, David L Johnson, Douglas H Johnson, Mark W Johnson, R Paul Johnson, Robert N Johnson, Karen M Joos, Nancy C Joyce, J Michael Jumper, Ula V. Jurkunas, Alon Kahana, Malik Y Kahook, Elliott Kanner, Kevin Kalwerisky, Henry J Kaplan, Ekaterini C Karatza, Randy Kardon, James A Katowitz, William R Katowitz, Melanie Kazlas, Kelly S Keefe, Lara Kelley, Charles J Kent, Kenneth R Kenyon, Bilal F Khan, Jemshed A Khan, Naheed W Khan, Peng Tee Khaw, Femida Kherani, Eva C Kim, Hee Joon Kim, Ivana K Kim, Jonathan W Kim, Rosa Y Kim, Stella K Kim, Tae-Im Kim, Christina M Klais, Stephen R Klapper, Barbara EK Klein, Guy Kleinmann, Thomas Klink, Dino D Klisovic, Stephen D Klyce, Tolga Kocaturk, Thomas Kohnen, Takeshi Kojima, Tobias Koller, David A Kostick, Joel A Kraut, Chandrasekharan Krishnan, Ronald R Krueger, Joseph H Krug, Sara Krupsky, Rachel W Kuchtey, Ramsay S Kurban, Paul A Kurz, JR Kuszak, Young H Kwon, Thad A Labbe, Deborah L Lam, Jeffrey C Lamkin, Kathleen A Lamping, Anne Marie Lane, Katherine A Lane, Keith J Lane, Jonathan H Lass, Mary G Lawrence, Andrew G Lee, Carol M Lee, Michael S Lee, Paul P Lee, William B Lee, Igal Leibovitch, Bradley N Lemke, Craig A Lemley, Andrea Leonardi, Simmons Lessell, Leonard A Levin, Grace A Levy-Clarke, Julie C Lew, Craig Lewis, Wei Li, Laurence S Lim, Lyndell L Lim, Wee-Kiak Lim, Grant T Liu, John I Loewenstein, McGregor N Lott, Jonathan C Lowry, David B Lyon, Robert E Lytle, Mathew MacCumber, Bonnie T Mackool, Nalini A Madiwale, Francis Mah, Martin A Mainster, Michael H Manning, Steven L Mansberger, Robert E Marc, Mellone Marchong, Dennis M Marcus, Julie A Mares, Brian P Marr, Carlos E Martinez, Robert W Massof, Yukihiro Matsumoto, Cynthia Mattox, Marlon Maus, Cathleen M McCabe, Steven A McCormick, Michael McCrakken, James P McCulley, John A McDermott, H Richard McDonald, Marguerite B McDonald, Peter J McDonnell, Robert McGillivray, Craig A McKeown, James McLaughlin, W Wynn McMullen, Shlomo Melamed, George Meligonis, Efstratios Mendrinos, Dale R Meyer, Catherine B Meyerle, William F Mieler, Michael Migliori, Martin C Mihm, Darlene Miller, David Miller, Joan W Miller, Neil R Miller, David M Mills, Monte D Mills, Tatyana Milman, Lylas Mogk, Marja Mogk, Jordi Monés, Robert Montes-Micó, Christie L Morse, Asa D Morton, Anne Moskowitz, Shizuo Mukai, A Linn Murphree, Robert P Murphy, Timothy G Murray, Philip I Murray, Karina Nagao, Jay Neitz, Maureen Neitz, Peter A Netland, Arthur H Neufeld, Nancy J Newman, Eugene WM Ng, Quan Dong Nguyen, Jerry Y Niederkorn, Robert J Noecker, Robert B Nussenblatt, Joan M O'Brien, Paul D O'Brien, Terrence P O'Brien, Denis O'Day, R Joseph Olk, Karl R Olsen, Sumru Onal, Yen Hoong Ooi, E Mitchel Opremcak, George Ousler, Randall R Ozment, Samuel Packer, Millicent L Palmer, George N Papaliodis, DJ John Park, David W Parke, Cameron F Parsa, M Andrew Parsons, Louis R Pasquale, Neha N Patel, Sayjal J Patel, Thomas D Patrianakos, James R Patrinely, Deborah Pavan-Langston, Eli Peli, Susan M Pepin, Victor L Perez, Juan J Pérez-Santonja, John R Perfect, Henry D Perry, Joram Piatigorsky, Dante Pieramici, Eric A Pierce, Roberto Pineda, Misha L Pless, Howard D Pomeranz, Constantin J Pournaras, William Power, Manvi Prakash, Anita G Prasad, Valerie Purvin, David A Quillen, Graham E Quinn, Melvin D Rabena, James L Rae, Michael B Raizman, Alessandro Randazzo, Narsing A Rao, Christopher J Rapuano, Sherman W Reeves, Carl D Regillo, Elias Reichel, Martin H Reinke, Douglas Rhee, Claudia U Richter, Joseph F Rizzo, Richard M Robb, Anja C Roden, I Rand Rodgers, Merlyn M Rodrigues, Yonina Ron, Geoffrey E Rose, Emanuel S Rosen, James T Rosenbaum, Perry Rosenthal, Strutha C Rouse, Barry W Rovner, Malgorzata Rozanowska, Michael P Rubin, Peter AD Rubin, Shimon Rumelt, Anil K Rustgi, Tina Rutar, Mark S Ruttum, Allan R Rutzen, Edward T Ryan, Alfredo A Sadun, José-Alain Sahel, Leorey Saligan, Sarwat Salim, John F Salmon, Diva R Salomão, David Sami, Michael A Sandberg, Virender S Sangwan, Maria A Saornil, Joseph W Sassani, Rony R Sayegh, Andrew P Schachat, Wiley A Schell, Amy C Schefler, Tina Scheufele, Vivian Schiedler, Gretchen Schneider, Alison Schroeder, Ronald A Schuchard, Joel S Schuman, Ivan R Schwab, Adrienne Scott, Ingrid U Scott, Marvin L Sears, Johanna M Seddon, Theo Seiler, Robert P Selkin, Richard D Semba, Irina Serbanescu, Briar Sexton, Tarek M Shaarawy, Peter Shah, Aron Shapiro, Savitri Sharma, Jean Shein, Debra J Shetlar, M Bruce Shields, Carol L Shields, Jerry A Shields, Bradford J Shingleton, John W Shore, Lesya M Shuba, Guy J Ben Simon, Richard J Simmons, Michael Simpson, Arun D Singh, Omah S Singh, Karen Sisley, Arthur J Sit, David Smerdon, William E Smiddy, Ronald E Smith, Terry J Smith, Neal G Snebold, Lucia Sobrin, John A Sorenson, Sarkis H Soukiasian, George L Spaeth, Richard F Spaide, Monika Srivastava, Sunil K Srivastava, Alexandros N Stangos, Tomy Starck, Walter J Stark, Joshua D Stein, Roger F Steinert, Leon Strauss, Barbara W Streeten, J Wayne Streilein, James D Strong, Ilene K Sugino, Eric B Suhler, Timothy J Sullivan, Jennifer K Sun, Janet S Sunness, Francis C Sutula, Nasreen A Syed, Christopher N Ta, Hidehiro Takei, Jonathan H Talamo, Richard R Tamesis, Madhura Tamhankar, Kristen J Tarbet, Michelle Tarver-Carr, Mark A Terry, Joseph M Thomas, Vance Thompson, Jennifer E Thorne, Matthew J Thurtell, David P Tingey, King W To, Faisal M Tobaigy, Michael J Tolentino, Melissa G Tong, Gail Torkildsen, Cynthia A Toth, Elias I Traboulsi, Michele Trucksis, James C Tsai, Julie H Tsai, David T Tse, Scheffer CG Tseng, Elmer Y Tu, Ira J Udell, Alejandra A Valenzuela, Russell N Van Gelder, Gregory P Van Stavern, Deborah K Vander Veen, Demetrios Vavvas, David H Verity, Paolo Vinciguerra, Paul F Vinger, Nicholas J Volpe, Werner Wackernagel, Sonal Desai Wadhwa, Michael D Wagoner, Nadia K Waheed, David S Walton, Martin Wand, Jie Jin Wang, Scott M Warden, Lennox Webb, David Weber, Daniel Wee, Corey B Westerfeld, Christopher T Westfall, Scott M Whitcup, Valerie A White, William L White, Jason Wickens, Janey L Wiggs, Jacob T Wilensky, Charles P Wilkinson, Patrick D Williams, David J Wilson, M Roy Wilson, Steven E Wilson, Jules Winokur, William J Wirostko, Gadi Wollstein, Albert Chak Ming Wong, Tien Y Wong, John J Woog, Michael Wride, Carolyn S Wu, Darrell WuDunn, Jean Yang, Lawrence A Yannuzzi, Michael J Yaremchuk, R Patrick Yeatts, Richard W Yee, Steven Yeh, Lucy HY Young, Jenny Y Yu, Beatrice YJT Yue, Charles M Zacks, Bruce M Zagelbaum, Maryam Zamani, Marco Zarbin, Leonidas Zografos, and Christopher I Zoumalan
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- 2008
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34. Conjunctival and Corneal Pathology
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Merlyn M. Rodrigues, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Kelly S. Keefe, and Tatyana Milman
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2008
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35. Spindle Cell Carcinoma of the Conjunctiva
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Anne C. Huntington, John M. Langloss, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Conjunctiva ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Ultrastructure ,Immunohistochemistry ,Spindle cell sarcoma ,Antibody ,Phthisis bulbi ,business ,Spindle cell carcinoma - Abstract
Six cases of conjunctival spindle cell carcinoma, a rare variant of squamous cell carcinoma, were studied. The median age of the three men and three women was 63.5 years. The tumors appeared as a single nodule in some patients or diffusely involved the conjunctiva in others. Two of the four individuals with intraocular extension presented with phthisis bulbi. Polyclonal antikeratin antibody was helpful and gave the most consistent results when compared with monoclonal antikeratin antibodies, AE1/3 and PKK1. The electron microscopic study of four lesions also established the epithelial nature of the tumor cells. Intracytoplasmic tonofilaments and a few desmosomes were present. Histopathologically, this variant of squamous cell carcinoma is difficult to distinguish from other spindle cell tumors, and this study demonstrates the value of immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy in supporting the correct diagnosis.
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- 1990
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36. Lipid Deposits Posterior to Impermeable Intracorneal Lenses in Rhesus Monkeys: Clinical, Histochemical, and Ultrastructural Studies
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George O. Waring, Bernard E. McCarey, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Merlyn M. Rodrigues, and Howard S. Kruth
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Filipin ,eye diseases ,law.invention ,Lens (optics) ,Ophthalmology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,law ,Homogeneous ,Cornea ,Refractive surgery ,Immunology ,Ultrastructure ,medicine ,Surgery ,sense organs ,Implant ,Electron microscope - Abstract
Synthetic materials are being evaluated for their potential long-term use in corneal refractive surgery. Clinical and histopathologic studies were performed with polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) and polysulfone intracorneal lenses in rhesus monkey eyes that were followed for up to 3 years. The 5 mm diameter lenses were placed in the deep posterior corneal stroma of four eyes. Fine, polychromatic crystalline deposits formed a layer posterior to the implants. Enucleated eyes had the corneas either frozen for histochemistry or fixed for electron microscopy. Special stains included oil red 0 and filipin on fresh frozen tissue. The cornea, with a PMMA intracorneal lens showed myriad crystalline aggregates in the deep corneal stroma behind the implant. These crystalline deposits stained positively with oil red 0 and with filipin indicating the presence of neutral fat as well as unesterified cholesterol. The polysulfone implant showed no evidence of crystalline deposits histologically but was surrounded by homogeneous aggregates that could represent nonspecific reaction to the lens material or protein deposits. Electron microscopy of all four corneas revealed dissolved lipid aggregates and laminated electron dense material that were most abundant posterior to the implant where the keratocytes appeared disintegrated. The PMMA lens appeared to induce lipid keratopathy. [Refractive and Corneal Surgery 1990;6:32-37]
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- 1990
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37. Myxofibrosarcoma of the orbit: an underrecognized entity? Case report and review of the literature
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Mingwu, Wang, Rahul N, Khurana, Jignesh G, Parikh, Ahmed A, Hidayat, and Narsing A, Rao
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Diagnosis, Differential ,Male ,Fatal Outcome ,Fibrosarcoma ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Exophthalmos ,Humans ,Orbital Neoplasms ,Radiography, Thoracic ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To describe the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of a rare case of myxofibrosarcoma (MFS) involving the orbit.Retrospective interventional case report and review of literature.The clinical history, systemic imaging studies, and histopathologic results of the orbital biopsy are reviewed.Clinical, radiologic, and histologic features of MFS.A 63-year-old Chinese male sought treatment for a history of rapidly progressive proptosis associated with decreased vision in the left eye over 10 days. Magnetic resonance imaging of the orbit revealed a homogenous mass extending to the optic canal. The mass was excised partially and was submitted for histologic and ultrastructural examination. Histologic testing revealed features of MFS with characteristic diffuse proliferation of atypical, spindle-shaped fibroblasts with prominent myxoid stroma. Tumor cells were reactive for vimentin. Ultrastructural examination revealed spindle-shaped tumor cells, rich in dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum and prominent vacuoles.For historical reasons, MFS involving the orbit is likely to be underrecognized and categorized erroneously as malignant fibrous histiocytoma or other soft tissue sarcoma. Although orbital MFS is an extremely rare diagnosis, ophthalmologists should be aware of the possibility and consider a diagnosis of MFS when an adult seeks treatment for an orbital tumor with aggressive growth.
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- 2007
38. Epithelial metaplasia of the corneal endothelium in Fuchs endothelial dystrophy
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Glenn C. Cockerham and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Corneal endothelium ,Fuchs Endothelial Dystrophy ,Keratin-20 ,Endothelial metaplasia ,Biology ,medicine ,Humans ,Vimentin ,Aged ,Metaplasia ,Endothelium, Corneal ,Fuchs' Endothelial Dystrophy ,Keratin-7 ,Mucin-1 ,Epithelium, Corneal ,Middle Aged ,Periodic Acid-Schiff Reaction ,eye diseases ,Actins ,Ophthalmology ,Epithelial Metaplasia ,Immunohistochemistry ,Keratins ,Female ,sense organs ,Biomarkers - Abstract
To evaluate the immunohistochemical characteristics of human corneas with the diagnosis of Fuchs endothelial dystrophy (FED).Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of corneas with the diagnosis of FED (15 patients) and 10 control corneas were stained with hematoxylin-eosin and periodic acid-Schiff (PAS). Adjacent histologic sections were stained with monoclonal antibodies that react with epithelial antigens: pancytokeratin, cytokeratins (CK) 7 and 20 CAM 5.2, epithelial membrane antigen (EMA), and Ber EP4. Eight corneas were stained with antibodies to vimentin, smooth-muscle actin (SMA), and CD 68.The endothelial cells in FED were attenuated and atrophic; some contained pigment consistent with melanin. The endothelial cells stained for pancytokeratin, CK 7, and vimentin in all corneas of FED, whereas variable staining was noted with CAM 5.2. No staining of endothelium was noted with CK 20, EMA, BerEP4, SMA, or CD 68.Some cytokeratins that are normally restricted to true epithelium are present in the endothelium of FED. Epithelial metaplasia of endothelium in FED may represent a nonspecific response of distressed endothelial cells, as previously reported in posterior polymorphous dystrophy, congenital hereditary endothelial dystrophy, and iridocorneal endothelial syndrome.
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- 2006
39. Molecular and clinical spectrum of type I plasminogen deficiency: A series of 50 patients
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Katrin Tefs, Deborah L Brown, Carolin Kneppo, Ömer Günhan, Maria Gueorguieva, Petra Zeitler, Elizabeth A. Sweeney, Miroslav Dostalek, Sonja Klebe, Patricia Contarini, Susanne Eisert, Jürgen Klammt, Kemal Örnek, Stephanie Turtschi, Maike Ziegler, Aslan Gökbuget, Mete Isikoglu, Volker Schuster, Boris Hügle, Reinhard Schneppenheim, Carl-Erik Dempfle, Carl M. Allen, Dilek Aktas, Sultan D. Aydogdu, Rakesh Mehta, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Fehim Y. Anlar, Ergin Çiftçi, Murat Irkec, Idil Kurtulus, Gábor Veres, Shelagh K. Joss, Stefan Seregard, and Ondokuz Mayıs Üniversitesi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Protein Conformation ,Immunology ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Mice ,Ligneous conjunctivitis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Secretion ,Mice, Knockout ,Mutation ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Hematology ,Genetic Carrier Screening ,Plasminogen ,Cell Biology ,Blood Coagulation Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Conjunctivitis ,In vitro ,Venous thrombosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Respiratory tract - Abstract
Ciftci, Ergin/0000-0002-4955-160X; Klebe, Sonja/0000-0002-8976-4714; Hugle, Boris/0000-0003-1145-6719; Klammt, Jurgen/0000-0003-2293-9193 WOS: 000241586100028 PubMed: 16849641 Severe type I plasminogen (PLG) deficiency has been causally linked to a rare chronic inflammatory disease of the mucous membranes that may be life threatening. Here we report clinical manifestations, PLG plasma levels, and molecular genetic status of the PLG gene of 50 patients. The most common clinical manifestations among these patients were ligneous conjunctivitis (80%) and ligneous gingivitis (34%), followed by less common manifestations such as ligneous vaginitis (8%), and involvement of the respiratory tract (116%), the ears (14%), or the gastrointestinal tract (2%). Four patients showed congenital occlusive hydrocephalus, 2 with Dandy-Walker malformation of cerebellum. Venous thrombosis was not observed. In all patients, plasma PLG levels were markedly reduced. In 38 patients, distinct mutations in the PLG gene were identified. The most common genetic alteration was a K19E mutation found in 34% of patients. Transient in vitro expression of PLG mutants R134K, delK212, R216H, P285T P285A, T319_N320insN, and R776H in transfected COS-7 cells revealed significantly impaired secretion and increased degradation of PLG. These results demonstrate impaired secretion of mutant PLG proteins as a common molecular pathomechanism in type I PLG deficiency.
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- 2006
40. Myxomas and angiomyxomas of the orbit: a clinicopathologic study of 6 cases
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Ahmed A, Hidayat, Andrew, Flint, Lawrence, Marentette, Elise, Torczynski, Jerman M, Al-Qahtani, Norman C, Ahl, and Victor M, Elner
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Male ,Antigens, CD34 ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Child, Preschool ,Humans ,Orbital Neoplasms ,Vimentin ,Female ,Child ,Factor XIIIa ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Myxoma ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To report clinical and histopathologic features and biologic behavior of orbital myxomas and angiomyxomas.Noncomparative retrospective case series.Patients with histopathologic diagnoses of orbital myxoma or angiomyxoma.Clinical metadata and features were obtained from the medical record. Neoplasms were studied by routine histopathology, special stains, and immunohistochemistry.Final diagnosis, based on histopathology, special stains, and immunohistochemistry, and clinical course from analysis of metadata and clinical features.Three myxomas and 3 angiomyxomas were identified in 5 males and 1 female. Median age at presentation was 56 years (range, 4-69), with a follow-up ranging from 6 months to 8 years. Two angiomyxomas occurred in children ages 4 and 7 years whose tumors were locally aggressive and recurred. Recurrence also complicated one case of myxoma after incomplete excision. Pathologically, the tumors were poorly circumscribed. Histopathology showed them to be hypocellular, containing stellate and spindled cells in an abundant, loose, myxoid stroma rich in hyaluronic acid. Small blood vessels were rare in myxomas but abundant in angiomyxomas. Tumor cells were frequently immunoreactive for vimentin, CD34, and factor XIIIa.Myxomas rarely involve orbital tissue, and no angiomyxomas of the region have been previously reported. Angiomyxomas in children may be aggressive. Vascularity and bone involvement appear to be important prognostic features for recurrence. Complete resection with a margin of healthy tissue appears to be the treatment of choice. Tumor cell immunopositivity for vimentin, CD34, and factor XIIIa may assist in the histopathologic diagnosis.
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- 2006
41. Renal medullary carcinoma metastatic to the orbit: a clinicopathologic report
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Newell A. Hargett, Lisa A. Zdinak, Narieman A. Nik, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Medullary cavity ,Sickle Cell Trait ,Renal medullary carcinoma ,Hemangioma ,Gross examination ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Renal cell carcinoma ,medicine ,Exophthalmos ,Humans ,Kidney ,business.industry ,Medial rectus muscle ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Primary tumor ,eye diseases ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Carcinoma, Medullary ,Orbital Neoplasms ,Surgery ,sense organs ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
A 39-year-old black man with sickle cell trait presented with a rapidly progressive, painful proptosis of the left eye. A computed tomographic scan was interpreted as revealing a cavernous hemangioma. Medial orbitotomy revealed a hard, gray mass supranasal to the optic nerve and invading the medial rectus muscle. Intraoperative frozen section specimens were read initially by the pathologist as metastatic adenocarcinoma. On gross examination, the conspicuous hemorrhage, necrosis, and bright yellow color characteristic of renal cell carcinoma were not present. Final pathologic analysis of the orbital lesion revealed metastatic renal medullary cell carcinoma. The primary lesion was located in the right kidney. Renal medullary carcinoma is a rare tumor, often affecting young individuals with sickle cell trait or disease. We report the first confirmed case of renal medullary carcinoma metastatic to the orbit with orbital symptoms preceding the diagnosis of the primary tumor.
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- 2004
42. Radiosensitive orbital inflammation associated with temporal arteritis
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Glenn C. Cockerham, Kimberly P. Cockerham, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Henry G. Brown
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Systemic disease ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Eye disease ,Giant Cell Arteritis ,Visual Acuity ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Orbital Diseases ,Humans ,Arteritis ,Aged ,Inflammation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Temporal Arteries ,Radiation therapy ,Ophthalmology ,Giant cell arteritis ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Visual Fields ,business ,Vasculitis ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
A 75-year-old woman developed acute loss of vision in the OD, ipsilateral periocular pain, an afferent pupillary defect, sectoral optic disc edema, and later ipsilateral proptosis and an intraconal mass. She denied any symptoms of temporal arteritis, and a sedimentation rate was normal. Orbital biopsy demonstrated chronic granulomatous inflammation with perivasculitis. A temporal artery biopsy disclosed findings consistent with temporal arteritis. Following 2000 cGy of external beam radiation, her visual function and orbitopathy completely resolved. This unusual presentation of orbital inflammation in association with temporal arteritis demonstrates that pathologic findings of temporal arteritis may be clinically nonspecific and that external beam radiation may be an effective therapy in this setting.
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- 2003
43. Extranodal marginal zone B cell lymphomas of the uvea: an analysis of 13 cases
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Sarah E, Coupland, Hans-Dieter, Foss, Ahmed A, Hidayat, Glenn C, Cockerham, Michael, Hummel, and Harald, Stein
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Uveal Neoplasms ,Lymphoma, B-Cell ,Syndecans ,Plasma Cells ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,NAD+ Nucleosidase ,Antigens, CD ,Humans ,ADP-ribosyl Cyclase ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Lacrimal Apparatus ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Cell Differentiation ,Middle Aged ,ADP-ribosyl Cyclase 1 ,Antigens, Differentiation ,Immunohistochemistry ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Interferon Regulatory Factors ,Female ,Proteoglycans ,Syndecan-1 ,Biomarkers ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
The majority of primary lymphoproliferative lesions of the uvea represent low-grade B cell lymphomas and often display a prominent plasmacellular differentiation. The purpose of the current study was to classify the uveal lymphoproliferations according to the REAL classification; examine the immune profile of the plasmacellular differentiated tumour cells using the plasma cell-related antigens multiple myeloma oncogene-1-protein (MUM1), Vs38c, CD38 and CD138; and to compare this profile with that of mature reactive plasma cells. Following fixation, 13 lymphoproliferative lesions of the uvea were categorized on the basis of their morphology and immunophenotype according to the REAL classification. Included in the immunohistochemistry were B cell-specific activator protein (BSAP), MUM1, Vs38c, CD38 and CD138. Nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was also performed on DNA extracted from paraffin sections for the detection of gene rearrangements of the heavy immunoglobulin chain (IgH). All of the 13 uveal tract lymphoproliferative lesions represented malignant lymphoma of B cell non-Hodgkin type and could be diagnosed as 'extranodal marginal zone B cell lymphomas' (EMZL). The degree of plasmacellular differentiation varied between the tumours. In contrast to their non-plasmacytoid counterparts, the 'plasmacytoid' EMZL tumour cells were negative for the B cell markers CD20 and BSAP, and demonstrated heterogeneous positivity for the markers MUM1, Vs38c, CD38 and CD138. The most consistent marker was MUM1, being observed in all tumours. Co-expression of all plasma cell markers was observed in four (31%) uveal EMZL. Loss of CD138 expression was observed in six (46%) tumours, of Vs38c expression in five (38%) and of CD38 in one (7%) tumour. Although the diagnosis of malignant lymphoma was unequivocally based on morphological and immunophenotypical features, the molecular analysis was able to demonstrate clonal B cell populations in only one uveal EMZL. All uveal lymphoid proliferations investigated represented EMZL, with the corresponding morphology and immunophenotype as seen in EMZL in other extranodal locations. MUM1, followed by CD38 expression, were the most constant plasma cell antigens in the plasmacytoid EMZL tumour cells, with both Vs38c and CD138 positivity being lost in many tumours. Aberrant immune profiles of plasma cell-related antigens may be of help in the establishment of malignancy in uveal lymphoproliferative lesions, particularly where interpretation of light chain expression and/or PCR results is difficult.
- Published
- 2002
44. Increased numbers of mast cells in pterygia
- Author
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M. Farooq Ashraf, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Daniel M. Laby, Andrew I. Rabinowitz, Sanna O. Tabbara, and Salim I. Butrus
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mast Cell Count ,business.industry ,Eye disease ,Cell Count ,Mast cell ,medicine.disease ,Pterygium formation ,Control subjects ,Pterygium ,eye diseases ,Mast cell proliferation ,Pathogenesis ,Mast (sailing) ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Humans ,sense organs ,Mast Cells ,business ,Conjunctiva ,Cell Division - Abstract
Purpose/Methods We examined the mast cells in 12 pterygium specimens of patients who underwent primary excisions and the conjunctival specimens of ten normal age-matched control subjects. Results/Conclusion The mean mast cell count per cubic millimeter was twice as high in the pterygium specimens as in the control specimens. Mast cell proliferation and activation may contribute to the pathogenesis of pterygium formation.
- Published
- 1995
45. Lacrimal sac tumors
- Author
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Joseph C. Flanagan, Jacob Pe'er, Mary A. Stefanyszyn, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Adenoid cystic carcinoma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dacryocystorhinostomy ,Pleomorphic adenoma ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Nasolacrimal duct ,Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Lacrimal drainage ,Lacrimal Apparatus ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Lacrimal sac ,Lymphoma ,Radiography ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Surgery ,Female ,business ,Medical literature - Abstract
This is a clinicopathologic study of 115 lacrimal sac neoplasms in adults (mean 52 years). The most common presenting signs and symptoms were epiphora (53%), recurrent dacryocystitis (38%), and/or lacrimal sac mass (36%). The tumors were divided into epithelial (82 cases) and nonepithelial (33 cases) neoplasms. Benign epithelial tumors included squamous and transitional cell papillomas (32), oncocytomas (4), and benign mixed tumors (2). The malignant epithelial neoplasms included squamous cell carcinoma (22), transitional cell carcinoma (5), adenocarcinoma (4), mucoepidermoid (3), adenoid cystic (3), and poorly differentiated carcinoma (1). The nonepithelial tumors consisted of fibrous histiocytoma (13), lymphoid lesions (10), malignant melanoma (6), hemangiopericytoma (1), lipoma (1), granulocytic sarcoma (1), and neurofibroma (1). Review of the literature, including our own series, discloses a 55% malignancy rate for tumors originating in the lacrimal sac. Malignant epithelial neoplasms, especially invasive transitional cell carcinoma, often recur locally and can metastasize and be fatal. Epithelial malignancies tend to grow along the epithelium of the lacrimal drainage system, and thus cure is dependent on a wide surgical excision of the tumor and of the entire lacrimal drainage system (canaliculi, sac, and nasolacrimal duct) combined with a lateral rhinostomy and radiation therapy.
- Published
- 1994
46. The histopathology and the mechanism of entropion in patients with trachoma
- Author
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Ali A. Al-Rajhi, Amin M. Nasr, Ahmed A. Hidayat, and Mubarak Al-Faran
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Conjunctiva ,Retention Cyst ,Meibomian gland ,Eye Infections, Bacterial ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Basement membrane ,Aged, 80 and over ,Trachoma ,business.industry ,Entropion ,Eyelids ,Meibomian Glands ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Fibrosis ,eye diseases ,body regions ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Palpebral fissure ,Histopathology ,Female ,sense organs ,business - Abstract
Background: Eyelids of patients with trachoma may be thickened. This thickening could be attributed to trachomatous changes in the conjunctiva and tarsus. Methods: Biopsies of tarsal plates and palpebral conjunctivae were obtained from 17 upper eyelids of 11 patients with inactive trachoma who underwent posterior tarsotomy procedures for entropion repair. Results: Light microscopy studies showed a thick and compact subepithelial fibrous membrane adherent to the tarsal plate. This membrane caused apparent thickening of the tarsus when measured intraoperatively (range, 1.25–2.00 mm). Other histopathologic findings include atrophy of the meibomian glands with thickening of the acinar basement membrane, loss of goblet cells, retention cysts, and hyaline degeneration of the tarsal plate with focal replacement by adipose tissue. Conclusion: The contraction of the subepithelial fibrous membrane formed by vertically oriented parallel collagen fibers is one of the main factors contributing to the entropion formation.
- Published
- 1993
47. The diagnostic histopathologic features of ocular malaria
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Thomas E. Johnson, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Robert M. Nalbandian, David W. Sammons, and Jay A. Fleischman
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Eye Hemorrhage ,Conjunctiva ,Erythrocytes ,genetic structures ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Eye ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,In patient ,Eye Infections, Parasitic ,Malaria, Falciparum ,biology ,business.industry ,Hemozoin ,Microcirculation ,Medial rectus muscle ,Retinal ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,sense organs ,Complication ,business ,Malaria - Abstract
Background: The ocular complications in patients with malaria have been studied clinically by many investigators, but the histopathologic changes were rarely described and generally regarded as nonspecific. Methods: The eye of a 53-year-old man who died of chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum malaria was studied by brightfield and polarized light microscopy. Findings: An epibulbar hemorrhage that involved the conjunctiva, episclera, and tendinous insertion of the medial rectus muscle was present. Cytoadherence and rosetting of the parasitized erythrocytes were observed within the partially occluded lumens of small retinal and uveal blood vessels. The birefringence of hemozoin (malarial pigment within the lumens of small ocular blood vessels and in the hemorrhagic epibulbar area was demonstrated by polarized light. Conclusions: Birefringent hemozoinemia in vascular lumens of ocular tissues indicates systemic malarial infestation by any of the four species of malaria. Cytoadherence and rosetting of the parasitized erythrocytes inside ocular capillaries and venules is diagnostic of P. falciparum and is an important cause of ocular hemorrhage.
- Published
- 1993
48. Molluscum contagiosum of the eyelid and infraorbital margin--a clinicopathologic study with light and electron microscopic observations
- Author
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Selwa A F Al-Hazzaa and Ahmed A. Hidayat
- Subjects
Male ,Molluscum contagiosum ,Infraorbital margin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Molluscum Contagiosum ,Molluscum contagiosum virus ,business.industry ,Eye Infections, Viral ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Eyelid Diseases ,Orbital Diseases ,Humans ,Eyelid ,business ,Child ,Electron microscopic - Published
- 1993
49. Isolated amyloidosis of anterior uvea and trabecular meshwork
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Peter D. Gorevic, Ahmad M. Mansour, and Ahmed A. Hidayat
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Systemic disease ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Trabecular Meshwork ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,urogenital system ,business.industry ,Amyloidosis ,fungi ,Anatomy ,Uvea ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Ophthalmology ,Amyloid deposition ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Iris Diseases ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Female ,Trabecular meshwork ,business ,Infiltration (medical) - Abstract
Amyloid deposition in the iris is rare, scanty and associated with systemic disease. We present a case of isolated localized heavy amyloid infiltration of the iris and describe a new hillock-pattern feature visualized using scanning electron microscopy.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. WT1 and Bcl2 Expression in Melanocytic Lesions of the Conjunctiva
- Author
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Aaron Auerbach, Ahmed A. Hidayat, Elisabeth J. Rushing, Bungo Furusato, Emiko Furusato, and Yan-Gao Man
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Conjunctival Neoplasm ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Conjunctiva ,Adolescent ,Conjunctival Neoplasms ,Conjunctival Diseases ,Melanosis ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Young Adult ,MART-1 Antigen ,Antigens, Neoplasm ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Atypia ,Humans ,Nevus ,Child ,WT1 Proteins ,Melanoma ,neoplasms ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Nevus, Pigmented ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,S100 Proteins ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Neoplasm Proteins ,HMB-45 ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Child, Preschool ,Dysplastic nevus ,Immunohistochemistry ,Female ,business ,Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome ,Melanoma-Specific Antigens - Abstract
Objective Recent studies indicate that WT1 and Bcl2 protein are detected in melanocytic lesions of the skin. We examined, for the first time, WT1 and Bcl2 expression in a variety of conjunctival melanocytic lesions to evaluate their diagnostic utility compared with other melanocytic markers. Methods Protein expression and localization of WT1 and Bcl2 were studied by means of immunolabeling and semiquantification in 123 conjunctival melanocytic lesions (71 benign nevi, 21 atypical nevi, 11 primary acquired melanosis, and 20 malignant melanomas). Ancillary immunohistochemical studies were performed with Bcl2, S100, HMB45, and Melan A antibodies. Results WT1 showed a graded increase in expression in lesions with increasing atypia. Higher mean numbers of WT1 -positive cells correlated with increasing atypia in melanocytes. In all cases, Bcl2 expression was positive and more robust than was S100, HMB45, or Melan A expression. WT1 and HMB45 frequently showed diffuse and strong staining in atypical nevi, primary acquired melanosis with atypia, and malignant melanomas compared with benign lesions. Conclusions Bcl2 is a highly sensitive immunohistochemical marker for melanocytic tumors of the conjunctiva; HMB45 and WT1 staining distinguishes benign from malignant lesions. Clinical Relevance Our results show that HMB45 and WT1 immunolabeling is helpful in the evaluation of conjunctival melanocytic lesions. Accordingly, we recommend the development of an immunohistochemical panel to classify these lesions.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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