Psammoma body
Appearance
A psammoma body is a round collection of calcium, seen microscopically. The term is derived from Greek άμμος (ámmos) 'sand'.
Cause
[edit]Psammoma bodies are associated with the papillary (nipple-like) histomorphology and are thought to arise from,
- Infarction and calcification of papillae tips.
- Calcification of intralymphatic tumor thrombi.[1]
Association with lesions
[edit]Psammoma bodies are commonly seen in certain tumors such as:
- Papillary thyroid carcinoma[2]
- Papillary renal cell carcinoma[3]
- Ovarian papillary serous cystadenoma and cystadenocarcinoma[4]
- Endometrial adenocarcinomas (papillary serous carcinoma ~3%-4%)
- Meningiomas, in the central nervous system[5]
- Peritoneal and pleural mesothelioma
- Somatostatinoma (pancreas)[6]
- Prolactinoma of the pituitary [7]
- Glucagonoma[8]
- Micropapillary subtype of lung adenocarcinoma[9]
Benign lesions
[edit]Psammoma bodies may be seen in:
- Endosalpingiosis[10]
- Psammomatous melanotic schwannoma
- Melanocytic nevus[11]
Appearance
[edit]Psammoma bodies usually have a laminar appearance, are circular, acellular and basophilic.
References
[edit]- ^ Johannessen JV, Sobrinho-Simões M (September 1980). "The origin and significance of thyroid psammoma bodies". Lab. Invest. 43 (3): 287–96. PMID 7401638.
- ^ Chapter 20 in: Mitchell, Richard Sheppard; Kumar, Vinay; Abbas, Abul K; Fausto, Nelson (2007). Robbins Basic Pathology. Philadelphia: Saunders. ISBN 978-1-4160-2973-1. 8th edition.
- ^ "Renal Cell Carcinoma". The Lecturio Medical Concept Library. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
- ^ Ovarian papillary serous cystadenocarcinoma at WebPath, The Internet Pathology Laboratory for Medical Education at Mercer University School of Medicine. Retrieved July 2011
- ^ "Brain Stem & Posterior Fossa". Archived from the original on 2000-03-01.
- ^ Lewis RB (2010). "Pancreatic Endocrine Tumors: Radiologic-Clinicopathologic Correlation". RadioGraphics. 30 (6): 1445–1464. doi:10.1148/rg.306105523. PMID 21071369.
- ^ Robbin's Pathology, Eight Ed
- ^ "Glucagonoma". The Lecturio Medical Concept Library. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
- ^ Emoto K, Eguchi T, Tan KS, Takahashi Y, Aly RG, Rekhtman N, Travis WD, Adusumilli PS (2019). "Expansion of the Concept of Micropapillary Adenocarcinoma to Include a Newly Recognized Filigree Pattern as Well as the Classical Pattern Based on 1468 Stage I Lung Adenocarcinomas". J Thorac Oncol. 14 (11): 1948–1961. doi:10.1016/j.jtho.2019.07.008. PMC 8785415. PMID 31352072.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Hallman KB, Nahhas WA, Connelly PJ (September 1991). "Endosalpingiosis as a source of psammoma bodies in a Papanicolaou smear. A case report". J Reprod Med. 36 (9): 675–8. PMID 1774734.
- ^ Rapini, Ronald. Practical Dermatopathology. Elsevier Mosby, 2005, p. 10.
External links
[edit]Look up papillary in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Slides: