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      Kimura's disease affecting the axillary lymph nodes: a case report.

      BMC Surgery
      Axillary lymph nodes, Biopsy, Eosinophilic granuloma, IgE-RIST, Kimura’s disease

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          Abstract

          Kimura's disease (KD; eosinophilic granuloma of soft tissue) is an inflammatory granulomatous disorder of unknown cause with eosinophilic infiltration that occurs mainly in soft tissue. KD occurs mainly in the head and neck, but development in the axillary region is very rare.

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          Most cited references11

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          Kimura Disease: A Case Report and Review of the Chinese Literature

          Background: Kimura disease, often accompanied by nephrotic syndrome, is a rare, chronic inflammatory disorder of unknown cause. In this report, the clinical and histopathological characteristics of 20 Chinese patients with Kimura disease-associated nephrotic syndrome were retrospectively evaluated. Methods: We report a case of Kimura disease that was diagnosed recently in our ward, with steroid-responsive but recurrent minimal-change nephrotic syndrome. Meanwhile, we also used three powerful Chinese journal search engines (Cqvip.com, Wanfang.data and ScienceChina) to search the cases reported in Chinese from 1984 to 2007. Results: The nephrotic syndrome of our patient occurred 20 months after the onset of Kimura disease. Renal biopsy revealed minimal-change lesions. The patient was responsive to the steroid, but proteinuria recurred. In most of the 19 other cases, the onset of nephrotic syndrome occurred after subcutaneous masses. Renal biopsy in 13 cases showed mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis in 9, minimal change disease in 2 and membrane nephropathy in 2 cases. Serum creatinine levels were elevated in 5 patients. Conclusion: Normally, Kimura disease-associated nephrotic syndrome patients are sensitive to prednisone therapy but are likely to relapse. In patients with recurrent nephrotic syndrome, renal insufficiency is not uncommon.
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            Kimura disease.

            Kimura disease is a benign rare chronic inflammatory disorder of unknown etiology that involves the lymph nodes and subcutaneous tissue of the head and neck regions. Elevated serum immunoglobulin E levels and peripheral blood eosinophilia are also common. This disease is most common in middle-aged Asian men. Although the etiology is unknown, it most probably represents an aberrant chronic immune response. Treatment for Kimura disease includes surgical resection and regional or systemic steroid therapy. Cytotoxic therapy and radiation have also been utilized. The disease has an excellent prognosis, although it may recur locally.
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              Lymphadenopathy of Kimura's disease.

              Kimura's disease is an important category of reactive lymphadenopathy in the Oriental population. The enlarged nodes are mostly located in the head and neck region. Salient pathological changes include florid germinal centers, Warthin-Finkeldey type polykaryocytes, vascularization of germinal centers, increased postcapillary venules in the paracortex, eosinophilic infiltration, and sclerosis. The pathology of Kimura's disease is quite different from that of angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia (epithelioid hemangioma). Immunoperoxidase studies show IgE reticular networks in germinal centers. Nondegranulated surface IgE-positive mast cells are present in the paracortex. The authors propose that Kimura's disease represents an aberrant immune reaction to an as yet unknown stimulus. Although the individual histological features are nonspecific, the constellation of features is highly characteristic of Kimura's disease. Since lymphadenopathy can herald involvement of other tissues and the prognosis is excellent, accurate diagnosis of this disease in lymph node biopsies may spare the patients unnecessary radical surgery.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                28549475
                10.1186/s12893-017-0260-8

                Axillary lymph nodes,Biopsy,Eosinophilic granuloma,IgE-RIST,Kimura’s disease

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