GANGLIONEUROMA
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It is a fully mature benign neoplasm of the sympathetic nervous system that usually occurs in older age group than Neuroblastoma
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Discovered incidentally but may present with VIP syndrome
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Age group-7 years of age or older
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Site– Arises in posterior mediastinum followed by the retroperitoneum particularly the presacral space
- Other rare sites are
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Cervical and parapharyngeal area
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Urinary bladder
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Prostate
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Bone
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Pancreas
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Skin
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Orbit
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Paratesticular areas
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Appendix
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GIT
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Spine cervical area
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Adrenals
Gross findings:
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Well circumscribed (some as encapsulated)
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Size -8-15cm
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Tumors are firm and resilient and an cross section are gray white to tan yellow
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Sometimes trabecular or whorled appearance is also present
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Adrenal Ganglioneuroma are sharply circumscribed and delimited by residual adrenal cortex and capsule. But rarely may extend beyond the confines of capsule
Microscopic:
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Ganglioneuromas contain a variable admixture of mature or mildly dysmorphic ganglion cells and an over abundance of mature Schwann cells
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Schawann cell component may be present as small fascicles or intersecting bundles which are separated by loose myxoid stroma
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Considerable variation occurs in distribution of ganglion cells. Paucity of ganglion cells may lead to confusion with neurofibroma
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Well differentiated ganglion cells have compact eosinophilic cytoplasm with distinct cell borders and a single eccentric nucleus with a prominent nucleolus
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Occasional dysmorphic ganglion cells with single or multiple pyknotic nuclei may be seen
In adrenal GN:
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Tumor is sharply demarcated from adjacent adrenal tissue or can insinuate between adjacent cells
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Cellular atypia , mitotic activity and necrosis may be absent
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Some ganglion cells contain brown granular pigment which is lipofuscin or neuromelanin
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Other features that can be present are
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Adipose tissue
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Chronic inflammation
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Collagenized stroma
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Malignant transformation into malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor or rhabdomyosarcoma nay occur
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Rare cases shows leydig cells in the tumor and patient presents with virilisation
Differential diagnosis – maturing Ganglioneuroma can simulate intermixed Ganglioneuroblastoma. In Ganglioneuroma, stroma constitutes >50% of the tumor
Reference:
Ernest E. Lack. Neuroblastoma, Ganglioneuroblastoma and other related tumors. In: Tumors of Adrenal Glands and Extraadrenal paraganglioma. AFIP Atlas of Tumor Pathology Series 4; Chapter 19: 463-477
Ganglioneuroma: Ganglion cells intermixed with spindle shaped schwann cells (H&E,X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Ganglion cells intermixed with spindle shaped schwann cells. Few vessels lined by endothelial cells are present (H&E,X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Tumor showing normal adrenal parenchyma trapped at periphery (H&E, X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Tumor showing normal adrenal parenchyma trapped at periphery (H&E, X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Tumor showing normal adrenal parenchyma trapped at periphery (top centre)(H&E, X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Tumor showing normal adrenal parenchyma trapped at periphery (H&E, X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Tumor showing normal adrenal parenchyma trapped at periphery (H&E, X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Tumor showing dysmorphic ganglion cells with binucleated nuclei with prominent nucleoli (H&E,X400)
Ganglioneurona: tumor shows lymphocytic infiltrate (H&E,X100)
Ganglioneurona: tumor shows lymphocytic infiltrate (H&E,X400)
Ganglioneuroma: spindle shaped tumor cells arranged in fascicles and stain positively with S-100 (S-100, X100)
Ganglioneuroma: Ganglion cells stain positively with Synaptophysisn (Synaptophysin, X 100)