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Carcinoma in gut-associated lymphoid tissue in ulcerative colitis: Case report and review of literature 被引量:1
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作者 Carlos A Rubio ragnar befrits Jannis Ericsson 《World Journal of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy》 CAS 2013年第6期293-296,共4页
The colorectal mucosa includes two quantitatively, structurally and functionally dissimilar areas: one, built with columnar and goblet cells, covers the vast majority of the mucosa, and the other consists of scattered... The colorectal mucosa includes two quantitatively, structurally and functionally dissimilar areas: one, built with columnar and goblet cells, covers the vast majority of the mucosa, and the other consists of scattered minute gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT). The overwhelming majority of colorectal carcinomas evolve in GALT-free mucosal areas and very rarely in GALT aggregates. Remarkably, the colonic mucosa in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) displays a high number of newly formed GALT-aggregates. The patient here described is a 68-year-old female with a history of UC since 1984. At surveillance colonoscopy in 2012, one of two detected polyps was a tubular adenoma with high-grade dysplasia. Beneath this adenoma, a well-circumscribed GALT sheltering a carcinoma was found. Serial sections revealed no connection between the villous adenomaand the GALT-carcinoma. The GALT-carcinoma here reported seems to have evolved in a newly formed, UC- dependent, GALT complex. This notion is substantiated by the fact that 27% or 4 out of the 15 cases of GALT- carcinomas in the colon reported in the literature (including the present case) evolved in patients with UC. 展开更多
关键词 Colon Advanced ADENOMA Gut-associated LYMPHOID tissue CARCINOMA ULCERATIVE COLITIS
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