| Literature DB >> 36128469 |
Priya Sahu1, Swasti Jain1, Manju Kaushal1.
Abstract
Kimura's disease (KD) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of unknown etiology, endemic in Asia. The typical clinical manifestations include a triad of painless unilateral cervical lymphadenopathy or subcutaneous masses predominantly in the head-and-neck region, blood and tissue eosinophilia, and elevated serum immunoglobulin (Ig) E levels. Many conditions including benign and malignant may mimic KD clinically. This study reports cytologic features of seven cases of KD which were studied and correlated with histology, Ig profile, and peripheral blood examination. KD shows a good response to medical treatment; hence, fine-needle aspiration cytology in conjunction with other laboratory findings lowers the need for additional biopsy procedures for early diagnosis as well as diagnosis of recurrent lesions.Entities:
Keywords: Angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia; Kimura’s disease; Warthin-Finkeldey polykaryocytes
Year: 2022 PMID: 36128469 PMCID: PMC9479607 DOI: 10.25259/Cytojournal_77_2020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytojournal ISSN: 1742-6413 Impact factor: 2.345
Figure 1:(a) Fine-needle aspiration showing polymorphous population of lymphoid cells (Giemsa, ×100), (b) interspersed Warthin– Finkeldey polykaryocyte on aspirate (Giemsa, ×100), (c) prominence of eosinophils in peripheral blood (Leishman, ×400), and (d) extensive eosinophilic infiltrate in lymph node section (H and E, ×400).
Differential diagnoses of Kimura disease.
| Differential diagnosis | Clinical findings | Peripheral blood eosinophilia | Serum IgE levels | Cytological features | Histological features |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kimura disease | Site: Deep skin, soft tissue, and lymph node | Mostly present | Elevated | Polymorphous population with markedly increased eosinophils admixed with lymphocytes, plasma cells, and occasional giant cells | Florid reactive lymphoid hyperplasia with Warthin– Finkeldey type multinucleate giant cells present, vascular proliferation and eosinophilic infiltration are minimal |
| Angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia | Site: Superficial skin and soft tissue | Rare | Normal | Abundant spindle to plump cells in a background of a polymorphous population of inflammatory cells with many eosinophils | The proliferation of thick-and thin-walled blood vessels with hypertrophic endothelial cells |
| Parasitic lymphadenopathy | Site: Lymph nodes | Present | Elevated | Part of parasite seen with numerous giant cells, plasma cells, and eosinophils | Parasitic remnants with plenty of eosinophils |
| Eosinophilic granuloma | Site: Bone | Absent | Normal | Characteristic Langerhans histiocytes with nuclear grooving in a background of polymorphous inflammation with eosinophils | Langerhans cells are diagnostic (CD1a and S100 positive), with prominent nuclear grooves and prominence of eosinophils and few osteoclasts |
| Hodgkin lymphoma | Site: Lymph nodes B symptoms usually present | Rare | Normal | Reed-Sternberg cells in a background of lymphocytes, plasma cells, eosinophils, and histiocytes | Prominence of eosinophils, plasma cells with atypical RS cells |
| Angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma | Site: Lymph nodes B symptoms usually present | May be present | Normal | Small to medium cells with moderate cytoplasm, condensed chromatin, and often indented nuclei | Medium-sized atypical neoplastic cells, lymphoid tissue fragments with transgressing vessels in a background of reactive lymphoid cells |
| Churg–Strauss syndrome | Site: Lungs and kidney | Present | Elevated | Eosinophilic abscesses, granulomas and Charcot– Leyden crystals | Necrotizing vasculitis and eosinophil-rich granulomatous inflammation |
RS: Reed–Sternberg