Search results for "Macrophagic myofasciitis"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

205th ENMC International Workshop: Pathology diagnosis of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies Part II 28-30 March 2014, Naarden, The Netherlands.

2015

The idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IM) are a heterogeneous group of diseases and diagnosis often necessitates a muscle biopsy. Five main entities are recognized: (1) dermatomyositis (DM); (2) polymyositis (PM); (3) necrotizing autoimmune myopathy (NAM); (4) sporadic inclusion body myositis (IBM); and (5) non-specific myositis. Other entities include granulomatous myopathy, macrophagic myofasciitis, and eosinophilic fasciitis (Shulman's syndrome). The pathological classification and subsequent identification of disease subgroups are extremely important for assessing treatment options and prognosis in the individual patient, yet classification criteria have not been standardized and vali…

2716 Genetics (clinical)medicine.medical_specialtyConsensusBiopsy10208 Institute of Neuropathology610 Medicine & healthPolymyositismedicineHumans2735 Pediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthColoring AgentsMyopathyGenetics (clinical)MyositisNetherlandsMuscle biopsyMyositismedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMusclesMacrophagic myofasciitisDermatomyositismedicine.diseaseDermatologyEosinophilic fasciitis2728 Neurology (clinical)Neurology2808 NeurologyPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthPhysical therapy570 Life sciences; biologyNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomInclusion body myositisbusinessNeuromuscular Disorders
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Macrophagic myofasciitis in a 3-month-old child

2015

Macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF) is a rare inflammatory myopathy which occurs after injection of aluminium-containing vaccines against hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis A virus, and tetanus toxoid. Most of the cases reported are from France and are adult patients. We report a rare case of MMF in a 3-month-old male child of Indian origin. He was immunized for HBV at birth after which he developed generalized hypotonia, and central nervous system and peripheral nervous system manifestations at 1 month of age. Muscle biopsy showed typical features of MMF and aluminium could be detected in the muscle biopsy macrophages by ultrastructural examination and LAMMA technique. Our case is the youngest …

Hepatitis B virusPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMuscle biopsymedicine.diagnostic_testTetanusbusiness.industryGeneralized hypotoniaMacrophagic myofasciitisToxoidmedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeInflammatory myopathymedicine.anatomical_structurePeripheral nervous systemPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthmedicineNeurology (clinical)businessJournal of Pediatric Neurology
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Macrophagic myofasciitis plus (distinct types of muscular dystrophy).

2009

Macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF) is a well-known lesion following vaccination with aluminium-containing vaccines. It has abundantly been reported in adults and several times in children, often in single patients or in rather small cohorts. Only few of these published reports on children have shown distinct myopathology of another neuromuscular disease except for MMF. Indications for biopsy often were nondescript clinical features in children, such as hypotonia or delay in motor development but, apparently, never that of suspected MMF. Thus, in previous reports as well as in our two patients, encountering MMF in the biopsied tissue specimens was coincidental. Our two unrelated patients with MM…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNeuromuscular diseaseBiopsyMuscle Fibers SkeletalMuscular DystrophiesLesionMicroscopy Electron TransmissionBiopsymedicineHumansMuscular dystrophyMuscle SkeletalMuscle biopsymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMacrophagesMacrophagic myofasciitisInfantGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseDermatologyHypotoniaPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessNeuropediatrics
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Th2-M2 immunity in lesions of muscular sarcoidosis and macrophagic myofasciitis

2015

Objective To analyse the paradox of a lack of giant cell formation and fibrosis in chronic lesions of macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF) in comparison with muscular sarcoidosis (MuS). Methods Inflammatory lesions and contiguous muscle regions from biopsy samples of 10 patients with MuS and 10 patients with MMF were cut out by laser microdissection. Mediators of the T helper cell (Th)1 inducing classical macrophage activation (e.g. STAT1, IFNγ and CXCR3), and Th2 inducing alternative activation of macrophages (e.g. CD206/MRC1, STAT6, SOCS1), molecules involved in development of fibrosis (e.g. TGFβ) and giant cells (e.g. TYROBP), were assessed by immunohistochemistry and real-time polymerase chai…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyMacrophagic myofasciitisT helper cellBiologyCXCR3medicine.diseasePathology and Forensic Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyFibrosisGiant cellPhysiology (medical)GranulomamedicineMacrophageNeurology (clinical)Laser capture microdissectionNeuropathology and Applied Neurobiology
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Myopathology of non-infectious inflammatory myopathies - the current status.

2007

Besides the classical inflammatory myopathies (IM), dermatomyositis (DM), polymyositis, and inclusion body myositis, the much larger spectrum of IM includes focal and nodular myositis, granulomatous myositis, macrophagic myofasciitis, graft vs. host myositis, eosinophilic myositis, and other immune-associated conditions, some of them only recently described. In addition, paraneoplastic, statin-induced and critical illness myopathies have been considered immune-associated IM. Infectious, i.e., bacterial, viral, and parasitic IM are much less frequent in the northern hemisphere. In IM, muscle biopsy is an essential diagnostic procedure to initiate therapy. The myopathological spectrum encompa…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMuscle biopsymedicine.diagnostic_testMyositisbusiness.industryMacrophagic myofasciitisCell BiologyDermatomyositismedicine.diseasePolymyositisImmunohistochemistryPathology and Forensic MedicineAtrophyEosinophilicImmunologymedicineHumansInclusion body myositisbusinessMyositisPathology, research and practice
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July 2003: 62-year-old female with progressive muscular weakness

2004

The July 2003 Case of the Month (COM). A 62-year-old female patient experienced progressive muscular weakness over the last ten years, involving shoulder and pelvic girdle muscles, paraspinal and facial muscles. A biopsy was taken from the left deltoid muscle where hepatitis vaccination had taken place 4 weeks previously. The specimen revealed macrophagic myofasciitis due to the injection of aluminium-bound vaccines. The finding can be reproduced experimentally by injecting vaccines in rats. The pathomechanism is supposed to involve immune stimulation due to long term persistence of the adjuvant. Macrophagic myofasciitis has been suggested to occasionally cause myopathy but is supposed to b…

Viral Hepatitis Vaccinesmedicine.medical_specialtyAluminum HydroxideMass SpectrometryCases of the Month: July to September 2003Pathology and Forensic MedicineDiagnosis DifferentialBiopsymedicineHumansMuscle SkeletalMyopathyInclusion BodiesHepatitisMuscle WeaknessPelvic girdlemedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMacrophagesGeneral NeuroscienceMacrophagic myofasciitisMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMuscular Dystrophy FacioscapulohumeralSurgeryVaccinationMicroscopy ElectronFacial musclesmedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessProgressive muscular weaknessBrain Pathology
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