Myint M A, Medeiros L J, Sulaiman R A, Aswad B I, Glantz L
Department of Pathology, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence 02903.
Arch Pathol Lab Med. 1994 Nov;118(11):1138-42.
Inflammatory pseudotumor (inflammatory fibroid polyp) of the ileum is a rare, usually solitary and polypoid lesion that frequently presents clinically as small-intestinal intussusception and obstruction. Regional lymph nodes are usually not involved. We describe an inflammatory pseudotumor of the ileum that was multifocal, not polypoid, and involved one regional lymph node. Grossly, two circumferential transmural nodules were separated by 8.5 cm of normal ileum. Microscopically, the lesion extended through the muscularis propria into peri-intestinal adipose tissue and involved one noncontiguous regional lymph node. The pseudotumor was composed of highly vascularized stroma with a mixture of spindle cells and chronic inflammatory cells including numerous eosinophils, lymphocytes, plasma cells, histiocytes, neutrophils, and multinucleated giant cells forming small granulomas. Immunohistochemically, the majority of spindle cells reacted with vimentin but not smooth-muscle, endothelial, or lymphoid markers. Ultrastructurally, the spindle cells had abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum, cytoplasmic filaments, and dense bodies consistent with myofibroblasts, plump endothelial cells (some with Weibel-Palade bodies), and chronic inflammatory cells. We prefer the term inflammatory pseudotumor to inflammatory fibroid polyp for the lesion in this case, since it was not polypoid and shared many histologic features with inflammatory pseudotumors arising at sites other than the gastrointestinal tract.