1.Acral Syringomas.
Sanghoon LEE ; Jeanne JUNG ; Seung Hun LEE
Annals of Dermatology 2003;15(1):21-22
Syringomas are relatively common benign adnexal tumors that are usually located on the lower eyelids, although affecting other areas, including cheek, axillae, abdomen and vulva. Acral syringomas, located on distal extremities are vary rare and there is only one case reported in Korea. We report a case of a healthy 21-year-old woman with multiple, reddish brown syringomas located on both forearms and the dorsa of hands. The histologic findings were typical of syringomas.
Abdomen
;
Axilla
;
Cheek
;
Extremities
;
Eyelids
;
Female
;
Forearm
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Syringoma*
;
Vulva
;
Young Adult
2.Leser-Trelat Sign in Glioblastoma Multiforme.
Sung Bin CHO ; Mi Ryung ROH ; Jeanne JUNG ; Se Hoon KIM ; Kee Yang CHUNG
Annals of Dermatology 2005;17(2):62-64
No abstract available.
Glioblastoma*
;
Keratosis, Seborrheic
3.A Case of Apocrine Poroma with Follicular and Sebaceous Differentiation.
Jeanne JUNG ; Ha Seong LIM ; You Chan KIM ; Soo Chan KIM
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2003;41(3):351-353
A poroma is usually described as a benign neoplasm arising from ductal epithelium of eccrine gland. However, in recent years there have been several reports on poromas featuring with combined sebaceous, follicular, and ductal differentiation, and thus establishment of this separate disease entity, "apocrine poroma" may well be justified considering the common embryologic origin of folliculosebaceous-apocrine unit. In our case, the tumor presented as a dark red nodule on the pubic area, being revealed as poroid neoplasm with folliculosebaceous components embedded in the lobules. Immunohistochemically, poroid cells stained with lysozyme. Taking the immunohistochemical staining results as well as the histopathologic findings of folliculosebaceous differentiation into consideration, we have concluded that this tumor is a case of an "apocrine poroma".
Eccrine Glands
;
Epithelium
;
Muramidase
;
Poroma*
4.Receptors for Treponema pallidum Attachment to the Surface and Matrix Proteins of Cultured Human Dermal Microvascular Endothelial Cells.
Ju Hee LEE ; Hyun Joo CHOI ; Jeanne JUNG ; Min Geol LEE ; Jung Bock LEE ; Kwang Hoon LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2003;44(3):371-378
Pathogenicity of Treponema pallidum may depend upon the binding of Treponema pallidum to matrix proteins, especially to fibronectin. Infectious organism or cell to matrix interactions are mediated by a family of adhesion molecule receptors known as integrins. Once in the host, the pathogenic Treponema pallidumdum adheres to the vascular endothelium and readily penetrates surrounding tissues. Fibronectin plays an important role in the mediation of the attachment of Treponema pallidum to host cells, including endothelial cells. We found that the binding of Treponema pallidum to human dermal microvascular endothelial cells and to a glass surface coated with fibronectin is inhibited by the presence of arginine-glycine- aspartic acid (RGD), and analysis of the surface receptor revealed an antigenic similarity to an integrin molecule, namely alpha5. This ability to adhere to host endothelium and fibronectin is quite unique to T. pallidum among the treponemes, and may be a key pathogenic factor.
Carrier Proteins/*physiology
;
Cell Membrane/metabolism
;
Cells, Cultured
;
Endothelium, Vascular/cytology/*metabolism
;
Extracellular Matrix Proteins/*metabolism
;
Human
;
Microcirculation
;
Skin/*blood supply
;
Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
;
Treponema pallidum/*physiology
5.Imaging Assessment of Visceral Pleural Surface Invasion by Lung Cancer: Comparison of CT and Contrast-Enhanced Radial T1-Weighted Gradient Echo 3-Tesla MRI
Yu ZHANG ; Woocheol KWON ; Ho Yun LEE ; Sung Min KO ; Sang-Ha KIM ; Won-Yeon LEE ; Suk Joong YONG ; Soon-Hee JUNG ; Chun Sung BYUN ; JunHyeok LEE ; Honglei YANG ; Junhee HAN ; Jeanne B. ACKMAN
Korean Journal of Radiology 2021;22(5):829-839
Objective:
To compare the diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced radial T1-weighted gradient-echo 3-tesla (3T) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) for the detection of visceral pleural surface invasion (VPSI). Visceral pleural invasion by non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) can be classified into two types: PL1 (without VPSI), invasion of the elastic layer of the visceral pleura without reaching the visceral pleural surface, and PL2 (with VPSI), full invasion of the visceral pleura.
Materials and Methods:
Thirty-three patients with pathologically confirmed VPSI by NSCLC were retrospectively reviewed.Multidetector CT and contrast-enhanced 3T MRI with a free-breathing radial three-dimensional fat-suppressed volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE) pulse sequence were compared in terms of the length of contact, angle of mass margin, and arch distance-to-maximum tumor diameter ratio. Supplemental evaluation of the tumor-pleura interface (smooth versus irregular) could only be performed with MRI (not discernible on CT).
Results:
At the tumor-pleura interface, radial VIBE MRI revealed a smooth margin in 20 of 21 patients without VPSI and an irregular margin in 10 of 12 patients with VPSI, yielding an accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and F-score for VPSI detection of 91%, 83%, 95%, 91%, 91%, and 87%, respectively. The McNemar test and receiver operating characteristics curve analysis revealed no significant differences between the diagnostic accuracies of CT and MRI for evaluating the contact length, angle of mass margin, or arch distance-to-maximum tumor diameter ratio as predictors of VPSI.
Conclusion
The diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced radial T1-weighted gradient-echo 3T MRI and CT were equal in terms of the contact length, angle of mass margin, and arch distance-to-maximum tumor diameter ratio. The advantage of MRI is its clear depiction of the tumor-pleura interface margin, facilitating VPSI detection.
6.Imaging Assessment of Visceral Pleural Surface Invasion by Lung Cancer: Comparison of CT and Contrast-Enhanced Radial T1-Weighted Gradient Echo 3-Tesla MRI
Yu ZHANG ; Woocheol KWON ; Ho Yun LEE ; Sung Min KO ; Sang-Ha KIM ; Won-Yeon LEE ; Suk Joong YONG ; Soon-Hee JUNG ; Chun Sung BYUN ; JunHyeok LEE ; Honglei YANG ; Junhee HAN ; Jeanne B. ACKMAN
Korean Journal of Radiology 2021;22(5):829-839
Objective:
To compare the diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced radial T1-weighted gradient-echo 3-tesla (3T) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) for the detection of visceral pleural surface invasion (VPSI). Visceral pleural invasion by non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) can be classified into two types: PL1 (without VPSI), invasion of the elastic layer of the visceral pleura without reaching the visceral pleural surface, and PL2 (with VPSI), full invasion of the visceral pleura.
Materials and Methods:
Thirty-three patients with pathologically confirmed VPSI by NSCLC were retrospectively reviewed.Multidetector CT and contrast-enhanced 3T MRI with a free-breathing radial three-dimensional fat-suppressed volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE) pulse sequence were compared in terms of the length of contact, angle of mass margin, and arch distance-to-maximum tumor diameter ratio. Supplemental evaluation of the tumor-pleura interface (smooth versus irregular) could only be performed with MRI (not discernible on CT).
Results:
At the tumor-pleura interface, radial VIBE MRI revealed a smooth margin in 20 of 21 patients without VPSI and an irregular margin in 10 of 12 patients with VPSI, yielding an accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and F-score for VPSI detection of 91%, 83%, 95%, 91%, 91%, and 87%, respectively. The McNemar test and receiver operating characteristics curve analysis revealed no significant differences between the diagnostic accuracies of CT and MRI for evaluating the contact length, angle of mass margin, or arch distance-to-maximum tumor diameter ratio as predictors of VPSI.
Conclusion
The diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced radial T1-weighted gradient-echo 3T MRI and CT were equal in terms of the contact length, angle of mass margin, and arch distance-to-maximum tumor diameter ratio. The advantage of MRI is its clear depiction of the tumor-pleura interface margin, facilitating VPSI detection.