• Title/Summary/Keyword: eosinophilic myositis

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Focal eosinophilic myositis presenting with leg pain and tenderness

  • Shin, Jin-Hong;Kim, Dae-Seong
    • Annals of Clinical Neurophysiology
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.125-128
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    • 2020
  • Focal eosinophilic myositis (FEM) is the most limited form of eosinophilic myositis that commonly affects the muscles of the lower leg without systemic manifestations. We report a patient with FEM who was studied by magnetic resonance imaging and muscle biopsy with a review of the literature.

Eosinophilic Myositis Induced by Anti-tuberculosis Medication (항결핵제 복용 중 발생한 호산구성 근염 1예)

  • Kim, Hyun-Jung;Park, Jung-Eun;Ryu, Yeong-Ha;Woo, Dae-Hyung;Shin, Kyeong-Cheol;Chung, Jin-Hong;Lee, Kwan-Ho
    • Journal of Yeungnam Medical Science
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.42-46
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    • 2010
  • Eosinophilic myositis is a rare idiopathic inflammatory muscle disease, and the patients with this malady present with diverse signs and symptoms such as muscle swelling, tenderness, pain, weakness, cutaneous lesions and eosinophilia. The etiology and pathogenesis of eosinophilic myositis remain elusive. Several drugs may occasionally initiate an immune mediated inflammatory myopathy, including eosinophilic myositis. We report here on a case a 17-year-old female patient who had taken anti-tuberculosis medicine for tuberculosis pleurisy. She presented with many clinical manifestations, including fever, skin rash, proximal muscle weakness, dyspnea, dysphagia and hypereosinophilia. She was diagnosed with eosinophilic myositis by the pathologic study. The muscle weakness progressed despite of stopping the anti-tuberculosis medicine, but the myositis promptly improved following the administration of glucocorticoid. Although drug induced myopathies may be uncommon, if a patient presents with muscular symptoms, then physicians have to consider the possibility of drug induced myopathies.

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Idiopathic eosinophilic myositis in Korean native cattle (Bos taurus coreanae)

  • Rhee, Seong-Hee;Yu, Il-Jeoung;Kim, Jong-Hoon;Kwon, Jung-Kee;Park, Jinho;You, Myung-Jo;Lee, Jeong-Won;Park, Hee-Jin;Chekarova, Irina;Camer, Gerry Amor;Lim, Chae-Woong;Kim, Bumseok
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Research
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    • v.48 no.2
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    • pp.187-190
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    • 2008
  • Eosinophilic myositis lesions are characterized by severe eosinophil infiltration along muscles of affected animals. The exact cause of the lesion remains controversial and the carcass is condemned once this lesion is seen during meat inspection. A cow slaughtered in Chonbuk province, Korea was observed to have disseminated pale foci throughout the musculature; meat samples were obtained and macroscopically investigated. Cut ends of neck and thigh muscle tissues showed variably sized, multifocal pale white-grayish nodular lesions. Histopathological examination consistently revealed inflammatory lesions with adjacent infiltration of eosinophilic granulocytes and focal necrotic calcification. However, no parasites, including Sarcocystis sp., could be discerned in the affected carcass. This case was diagnosed as idiopathic eosinophilic myositis in cattle.

Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology of Myositis Ossificans - A Case Report - (골화성 근염의 세침흡인 세포학적 소견 - 1예 보고 -)

  • Kim, Dong-Won;Lee, Dong-Wha
    • The Korean Journal of Cytopathology
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.123-127
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    • 1998
  • The aspiration cytologic finding of myositis ossificans is not well documented but similar to that seen in nodular fasciitis except less cellularity. Myositis ossificans is a reactive condition that is sometimes mistaken microscopically for extraosseous osteosarcoma. Cytologically, myositis ossificans may be distinguished from extraosseous osteosarcoma by the presence of uniform benign stromal cells composed of mature fibroblasts and osteoclastic giant cells. However, the differential diagnosis may be difficult in the early stage of this reactive and proliferative process. We recently experienced a case of myositis ossificans. The patient was a 67-year -old woman with painful swelling of the left index finger for one month. Simple x-ray finding showed a soft tissue mass with calcific center at middle phalanx of the left hand. Fine needle aspiration cytology revealed a few individual or clusters of spindle cells in dense eosinophilic stroma with osteoclastic giant cells. The spindle cells were uniform smooth-bordered, and oval nuclei with single small inconspicuous nucleoli, and elongated cytoplasm. The scattered individual cells had eccentric nuclei with one or two nucleoli and abundant, basophilic cytoplasm.

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Sarcocystosis in a 30 month old Hanwoo(Bos taurus oreanae)

  • Ku, Kyung-Nyer;Kim, Kyung-Sook;Yang, Il;Lee, Ho-Seung;Woo, Jong-Tae
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Service
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.465-469
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    • 2008
  • Unusual yellowish-green intramuscular granulomatous lesions were found in a carcass of Hanwoo(slaughtered, 30 month old). Those were 1-3 mm in diameter, oval shaped, and paralleled with muscle fibers. Histologically, severe inflammation, eosinophilic granulomas and necrosis were observed in the muscle tissue. We also observed sarcocysts in the muscle cells. In a polymerase chain reaction, we identified 900bp length, sarcocystis specific fragment. It would be diagnosed as sarcocystosis in Hanwoo.

Eosinophilic Myositis in a Slaughtered Korean Cow

  • Do, Sun-Hee;Kim, Suk-Hwan;Jeong, Won-Il;Jeong, Da-Hee;Lee, Gi-Ppeum;Yang, Hai-Jle;Yuan, Dong-Wei;Sohn, Myung-Hee;Lee, Chang-Woo;Kim, Tae-Hwan;Jeong, Kyu-Shik
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Veterinary Pathology Conference
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    • 2004.10a
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    • pp.27-27
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    • 2004
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Pathological observation on the piglets experimentally infected with Aujeszky′s disease virus isolated in Korea (국내 분리 오제스키병 바이러스 접종자돈의 병리학적 관찰)

  • Park, Nam-Yong;Chung, Chi-Young;Kim, JIn-Ho;Yoon, Jin-Gyu;Park, Young-Seok
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Pathology
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.117-125
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    • 1998
  • Pathological studies were performed on the five piglets experimentally infected with Aujeszky's disease virus(pseudorabies), NYJ isolate, isolated from the naturally infected pigs in Korea: two piglets were inoculated intramuscularly, two piglets intranasally, and one piglet subcutaneously at the dose of 1$m\ell$ per animal with the 105.5 $TCID_50$/0.1ml titer. Clinical signs included dyspnea, high fever(>$41^{\circ}C$), anorexia, vomiting, diarrhea or constipation, ataxia, circling movement, posterior paralysis, intermittent convulsion, and coma followed by death although some variations by age and inoculated routes were observed. Gross features included multiple necrotic foci in the liver, congestion and hemorrhage in the lymph nodes and spleen, petechial hemorrhage in the kidney, hemorrhagic pneumonia, marked meningeal congestion, severe sub meningeal hemorrhage in the spinal cord, excessive cerebrospinal fluid retention, and muscular necrosis at the inoculated area. Microscopically, non suppurative meningoencephalitis with gliosis and perivascular cuffing in CNS, ganglioneuritis, necrohemorrhagic splenitis, necrotic hepatitis, tonsillitis and rhinitis, hemorrhagic or interstitial pneumonia, and non-suppurative myositis in the injected area were observed. Eosinophilic intranuclear inclusion bodies were found in a variety of tissues the including the liver, kidney, adrenal gland, spleen, lymph nodes, tonsil, and lung. Ultrastructurally, virus particles were confirmed in nucleus and cytoplasms of pneumocytes around the necrotic areas.

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