Lymphadenopathy of Kimuraʼs Disease
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The American Journal of Surgical Pathology
- Vol. 13 (3) , 177-186
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000478-198903000-00001
Abstract
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 desease in lymph node biopsies may spare the patients unnecessary radical surgery.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Kimura’s disease: a clinico-pathological study of 21 cases and its distinction from angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophiliaPathology, 1984
- Production of a monoclonal antibody reactive with human dendritic reticulum cells and its use in the immunohistological analysis of lymphoid tissue.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1983
- SERUM IGE AND IGE ANTIBODY-LEVELS IN PATIENTS WITH BRONCHIAL-ASTHMA, ATOPIC-DERMATITIS, EOSINOPHILIC GRANULOMAS OF THE SOFT-TISSUE (KIMURAS DISEASE) AND OTHER DISEASES1983
- Lymphocyte recognition of lymph node high endothelium. IV. Cell surface structures mediating entry into lymph nodes.The Journal of Immunology, 1982
- Warthin‐Finkeldey‐like cells in benign and malignant lymphoid proliferationsHistopathology, 1982
- A PATHOLOGICAL STUDY ON EOSINOPHILIC LYMPHFOLLICULOID GRANULOMA (KIMURA'S DISEASE)Acta Pathologica Japonica, 1981
- Polykaryocytes resembling warthin-finkeldey giant cells in reactive and neoplastic lymphoid disordersHuman Pathology, 1981
- The histiocytoid hemangiomasHuman Pathology, 1979
- Hodgkin's disease with lymphocytic predominance, nodular type (nodular paragranuloma) and progressively transformed germinal centres—a cytohistological studyHistopathology, 1979
- ANTIGENS IN IMMUNITYThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1968