Abstract
Granular cell tumor (GCT) is a rare and usually benign lesion of neural / schwannian origin, most frequently found in middle-age women. The appendicular involvement is extremely rare: in over half a century only twelve cases have been reported in the literature, the patients living in America and Europe. Hitherto, no cases are documented from Africa, Asia and Oceania and no cases of malignant GCTs of the appendix have been reported.Most patients were diagnosed preoperatively as having acute appendicitis, whereas in three patients the tumor was incidentally detected during major abdominal surgery. The GCTs were equally distributed between mid-appendix and tip, where lymphoid tissue is more abundant and the anatomical nerve supply is progressively reduced. Moreover, the appendix surrounding the GCTs is characterized by the presence of chronic inflammatory cells (histiocytes, plasmocytes, eosinophils, mastocytes) and, therefore, a chronic inflammation of the appendix may be an antecedent condition favouring the appearance of GCTs. The GCT of the appendix appears so to be a lesion that reflects local reactive changes in the neural / schwannian cells, rather than being a genuine neoplasm. We describe the smallest GCT of the appendix ever reported, with a detailed literature review supporting its reactive origin in the lymphatic tissue-rich sites, such as ileo cecal appendix.
Highlights
Granular cell tumor (GCT) is a rare and usually benign lesion which occurs in different districts of the body, but in the oral cavity (Vered et al 2009)
We describe the smallest GCT of the appendix ever reported, with a detailed literature review supporting for the first time its reactive origin in the lymphatic tissue-rich sites, such as ileo cecal appendix
The tumor cells are immunoreactive for S-100 proteins, calretinin, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), laminin and CD68 (Kp1) (Vered et al 2009; Rosai 2004; Weiss 2007), but they do not react with antibodies for neurofilaments or glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) (Rosai 2004; Ordenez 1999; Weiss 2007)
Summary
Granular cell tumor (GCT) is a rare and usually benign lesion which occurs in different districts of the body, but in the oral cavity (Vered et al 2009). GCT usually presents as a painless, solitary and circumscribed nodule, under 3 cm in diameter, occurring mainly in the tongue, esophagus, skin, muscle or subcutaneous tissue (Weiss 2007; Zoccali et al 2011; Lack et al 1980). It can appear in internal organs, involving the respiratory or urinary tract and the central nervous system. In literature no data are reported, which correlate the GCT incidence with the risk for colorectal cancer, and our effort has been aimed in the clinical management of patients affected by GCT involving the lymphatic tissue-rich sites, such as ileo cecal appendix
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