A radiological aspect of segmental hypoplasia of the kidney was found on intravenous urography of eight patients. Urography was performed five times for arterial hypertension, two times for proteinuria and one time for pathological pregnancy. Aglomerular segmental hypoplasia was constantly observed on histological examination, and in three cases an important follicular ureteritis was found. Medical treatment and unilateral nephrectomy greatly improved clinical symptoms of six cases.
The phenytoin-induced hypersensitivity syndrome is characterized by the development of fever, rash, lymphadenopathy, and hepatitis associated with leukocytosis and eosinophilia. This article describes the unusual occurrence of a pseudo-Sézary syndrome in the days following the introduction of phenytoin treatment.
Observation.—
A phenytoin-induced erythroderma developed in a 60-year-old woman the histologic, cytologic, and immunologic characteristics of an erythrodermal cutaneous T-cell lymphoma of the Sézary syndrome type with lymph node involvement. The dramatic improvement after withdrawal of drug therapy and the absence of recurrence 5 years after led us to consider it as a hydantoin-induced pseudolymphoma.
Conclusions.—
Although lymph node pseudolymphomas induced by phenytoin are well known, few cases of hydantoin-induced mycosis fungoides have been reported in the literature. We present herein the first case of a Sézary-like syndrome associated with phenytoin therapy. Such a patient must be monitored regularly because of the risk of a true malignant lymphoma developing even many years later. (Arch Dermatol.1992;128:1371-1374)
Authors report the immunogenotype of two cases of Richter's syndrome. The immunoglobulin gene rearrangement pattern obtained on Southern Blot analysis was found in both cases to be the same in leukemic blood cells and in the tissue involved by the lymphoma. The beta chain and gamma chain T-cell receptor gene rearrangement pattern exhibited a germ-line configuration in the peripheral blood cells and in the lymph node in Case 2, whereas in Case 1 the lymph node had a gene rearrangement in the beta chain, as well as in the gamma chain T-cell receptor, and the leukemic cells from bone marrow were found to be in a germ-line configuration for T-cell receptors (beta and gamma chains).