Silica reaction simulating fibrous histiocytoma
- 1 December 1978
- Vol. 42 (6) , 2738-2743
- https://doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(197812)42:6<2738::aid-cncr2820420632>3.0.co;2-d
Abstract
An unusual foreign body reaction to silica (quartz), resembling fibrous histiocytoma, is described in 7 patients (age range 22 to 71 years). These lesions occurred in the inguinal region (4 cases) or the abdominal wall (3 cases), and in 5 instances were associated with a history of injection at the same site 10 to 41 years previously. Most commonly the injection consisted of the administration of a sclerosing agent for the repair of a hernia. Microscopically these lesions contained broad sheets of histiocytes separated by bands or concentrically lamellated nodules of collagen. Intra- and extra-cellular birefringent crystals, identified by x-ray diffraction as silica (quartz), were present in all cases and served to distinguish this process from a true neoplasm. Although the injection therapy for hernia is now obsolete, it was formerly practiced in the United States with a variety of sclerosing agents including silica (quartz). Since these lesions are often confused with a benign or malignant fibrous histiocytoma it is recommended that fibro-histiocytic lesions associated with a previous hernia or injection at the same site be examined for the presence of silica. Cancer 42:2738–2743, 1978.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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