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Featured researches published by Beria Cabello-Inchausti.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2004

Phlegmonous gastritis associated with Kaposi sarcoma: a case report and review of the literature.

Qing Qing Yu; Amina Tariq; Stephen W. Unger; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Morton J. Robinson

We report a case of phlegmonous gastritis associated with Kaposi sarcoma in a 37-year-old, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive man who presented with an acute abdomen. Computed tomographic scan revealed free fluid in the abdominal cavity and a thickened gastric wall. A partial gastrectomy was performed. The resected portion of stomach had a hemorrhagic, necrotic thickened wall and showed extensive, acute suppurative inflammation, especially in the submucosa, with focal transmural involvement. Beneath an area of healing ulceration, a focus of Kaposi sarcoma was present. Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus was grown from peritoneal fluid, and treatment with numerous antibiotics was initiated. After a difficult postoperative course that responded to 8 weeks of antibiotic therapy, the patient was medically stable and discharged from the hospital on antiretroviral therapy for HIV. Phlegmonous gastritis is a rare and rapidly progressive bacterial infection of the gastric wall. Kaposi sarcoma is one of the most common malignancies in HIV-positive patients, and gastric involvement is relatively common in those patients with systemic Kaposi sarcoma. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of phlegmonous gastritis associated with Kaposi sarcoma, and it represents a rare survival following surgical and antibiotic therapy.


Pathology Research and Practice | 1998

Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma of the Spleen

Gisela A. Nai; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Saul Suster

A case is presented of CD30+ anaplastic large cell lymphoma of the spleen. The patient, a 61 year old woman with a history of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) was seen for the sudden development of splenomegaly with thrombocytopenia. A splenectomy was performed which showed massive replacement of the spleen by a population of large atypical lymphoid cells showing bizarre nuclear forms and multinucleated tumor cells reminiscent of Reed-Sternberg cells. Immunohistochemical studies showed strong membrane and dot-like paranuclear positivity in the majority of the atypical cells for CD30, with coexpression in many of the cells for CD15. Additionally, the cells also strongly reacted with CD3, UCHL-1, EMA and LCA. The present case illustrates an unusual variant of anaplastic (CD30+) large cell lymphoma sharing histologic and immunophenotypic features that overlap with those of Hodgkins disease. The history in this patient of CLL with sudden development of splenomegaly raises the possibility of transformation of CLL into a high-grade lymphoma (Richters syndrome). The possible pathogenetic implications of this phenomenon are discussed.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2001

Extranodal lymphoplasmacytoid lymphoma (immunocytoma) presenting as small intestinal obstruction

Monica A. Recine; Maria T. Perez; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Rogerio Lilenbaum; Morton J. Robinson

A 57-year-old woman presented with intermittent symptoms of intestinal obstruction. Workup provided nondiagnostic radiologic studies. An exploratory laparotomy revealed a segmental dilatation in the proximal ileum, which showed diffuse thickening of the intestinal wall. Microscopic examination of the affected area disclosed a diffuse transmural infiltrate composed of small lymphocytes, mature plasma cells, and lymphoplasmacytoid cells in different stages of maturation associated with extracellular periodic acid-Schiff-positive material. In addition, serum protein electrophoresis showed a monoclonal immunoglobulin M kappa paraprotein. Postoperative workup did not demonstrate evidence of systemic involvement. The morphologic features and immunohistochemical and molecular analyses were consistent with lymphoplasmacytoid lymphoma (immunocytoma). We report an unusual case of primary extranodal immunocytoma involving the small intestine and discuss its clinicopathologic features.


Annals of Diagnostic Pathology | 1998

Pleural body cavity-based lymphoma

Maria T. Perez; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Manuel Viamonte; Daniel Nixon

We report a case of recurrent body cavity-based non-Hodgkins lymphoma in a patient with advanced acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who presented with bilateral pleural effusions, without evidence of an associated tumor mass. The lymphoma cells were large and pleomorphic, lacking pan-T- and pan-B-cell markers, but expressing activation markers (CD30, CD38, and HLA-DR). The purpose of this article is to discuss the radiological-pathological correlation of body cavity-based lymphoma with a review of the entities that should be included in the differential diagnosis of patients with malignant pleural effusions.


Labmedicine | 2000

The Peripheral Blood Smear in Patients With Sickle Cell Trait: A Morphologic Observation

Christopher I. Wilson; Paulette L. Hopkins; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Steven J. Melnick; Morton J. Robinson

It has been documented that individuals with sickle-cell trait (SCT) usually possess a normal complete blood cell count (CBC) and normal RBC morphology in the peripheral blood smear (PBS). We, however, have observed that the PBS of patients with SCT contains variable numbers of abnormally shaped RBCs (aRBCs), characterized by an elongated shape with tapered ends. To investigate whether these aRBCs are an invariable finding, the PBS of 71 patients with SCT and 72 patients without SCT were compared via light microscopy. Ninety-six percent of the study group had aRBCs in their PBS compared with 4% of the control group. The majority of the control group (96%) had no aRBCs (0%) in their PBS.


Annals of Diagnostic Pathology | 1999

Intraductal carcinoma (Carcinoma in situ) of the pancreas with microinvasion

Amilcar A. Castellano-Sanchez; Maria T. Perez; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Irvin H. Willis; Belkis Pelaez; Enrique Davila

We report a case of predominantly intraductal carcinoma of the pancreas with microscopic foci of invasive carcinoma in a patient with chronic pancreatitis. In this article, we discuss the pathologic and prognostic features of pancreatic carcinoma in situ. This entity is probably overlooked due to a number of reasons, including the fact that, in most cases, pancreatic ductal carcinomas are extensively infiltrative at the time of surgical removal; the atypical epithelial changes in the intraductal carcinoma had been overlooked in the presence or absence of an invasive component; epithelial changes may be missed due to insufficient sampling; and last, the differentiation with atypical epithelial hyperplasia is a subjective matter. Intraductal carcinoma of the pancreas is a distinct pathological entity with characteristic morphologic changes restricted to the ductal epithelium, bearing important prognostic implications.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2002

Primary gastroesophageal-ileal hodgkin lymphoma.

Maria T. Perez; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Amilcar A. Castellano-Sanchez; Samer Kottiech; Enrique Davila; Irvin Willis; Jamie S. Barkin

Primary Hodgkin lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract is exceedingly rare to the point that some authors regard with skepticism the existence of this entity. Cases of gastrointestinal Hodgkin lymphoma have been reported previously; however, most of these cases represented secondary involvement of the digestive tract in the context of systemic disease. Other cases have been reclassified in retrospective studies as non-Hodgkin lymphomas after the application of immunohistochemical techniques. We report a case of primary Hodgkin lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract in a patient who presented with obstructive symptoms at the site of a gastroileal bypass; the bypass had been performed years earlier because of morbid obesity. Some non-Hodgkin lymphomas may morphologically mimic Hodgkin lymphoma and vice versa; therefore, an accurate pathologic diagnosis is important, since the therapeutic approach and prognostic implications differ significantly for these diseases. In this context, immunohistochemistry should be used to confirm or to exclude the histologic diagnosis of Hodgkin lymphoma.


Archives of Dermatology | 1988

Histiocytic Lymphophagocytic Panniculitis: An Unusual Extranodal Presentation of Sinus Histiocytosis With Massive Lymphadenopathy (Rosai-Dorfman Disease)

Saul Suster; Norbert Cartagena; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Morton J. Robinson


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 1989

Nongranulomatous involvement of the bone marrow in lepromatous leprosy

Saul Suster; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Morton J. Robinson


Annals of Diagnostic Pathology | 2002

Necrotizing granulomas in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma

Mario Blanco; Judith Ratzan; Beria Cabello-Inchausti; Lianne Fernandes

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Saul Suster

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Steven J. Melnick

Boston Children's Hospital

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