Abstract
This report describes a vasculitis and subsequently developing angiodestructive lymphoma in an 11-year-old Japanese-Filipino girl exhibiting mosquito allergy with the background of chronic active Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. She developed necrotic skin ulcer at the site of mosquito bite, and histopathological examination revealed EBV-positive mononuclear cell infiltration throughout the wall of small-sized muscular artery. These EBV-positive lymphoid cells were oligoclonal in Southern blot analysis for EBV terminal repeats. Effectiveness of steroid therapy also supports the nonneoplastic nature. Approximately 1 year later, she developed progressive large skin ulcer without mosquito bites. Microscopically, the angiocentric or angiodestructive pattern of EBV-positive atypical cells supported the diagnosis of extranodal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma. Southern blot analysis revealed the monoclonal neoplastic nature of EBV-positive cells. In contrast to the primary mosquito bite lesion, natural killer/T-cell lymphoma cells exhibited the higher expression of EBV latent membrane protein 1 mRNA and the apparent protein expression detected by immunohistochemistry.
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