Biphasic disease

A biphasic disease is a disease which has two distinct phases or components. In clinically biphasic diseases, the phases are generally chronologically separated. In histopathologically biphasic tumors (also called biplastic tumors), there is neoplastic tissue which contains two different cellular elements.[1][2]

Examples

Clinically biphasic diseases

DiseaseTypical first phaseTypical second phase
European (or "Western") subtype of tick-borne encephalitis virus[3][4] Relatively mild flu-like illnessAffecting some cases, generally presenting with high fever and neurologic disease (encephalitis), meningitis and/or meningoencephalitis)
Leptospirosis[5] 4–9 days of abrupt onset of flu-like illnessFever, jaundice, abdominal pain and diarrhoea. Organ failure in severe cases.
Anthracosis[6] After approximately 4 days, patients develop flu-like illness with fever, nonproductive cough, and myalgias lasting approximately 4 daysWithout timely treatment, a second fulminant phase follows, characterized by hypotension and dyspnea. This phase may progress to death within 24 hours of its onset

Tumor biplasia

DiseaseCellular elements
Fibroadenoma[7] EpitheliumStroma
Ceruminous adenoma[8] Inner luminal secretory cellsMyoepithelial cells

References

  1. Santosh, Arvind Babu Rajendra (2014). "Histogenetic Concepts, Terminology and Categorization of Biphasic Tumours of the Oral and Maxillofacial Region". Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research. 8 (2): 266–70. doi:10.7860/JCDR/2014/7506.4078. ISSN 2249-782X. PMC 3972583. PMID 24701553.
  2. "Fibroadenoma". Patholines.org. This page was last edited on 4 November 2019
  3. Veje, Malin; Studahl, Marie; Johansson, Maja; Johansson, Patrik; Nolskog, Peter; Bergström, Tomas (2017). "Diagnosing tick-borne encephalitis: a re-evaluation of notified cases". European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases. 37 (2): 339–344. doi:10.1007/s10096-017-3139-9. ISSN 0934-9723. PMC 5780526. PMID 29188467.
  4. Kaiser R (September 2008). "Tick-borne encephalitis". Infect. Dis. Clin. North Am. 22 (3): 561–75, x. doi:10.1016/j.idc.2008.03.013. PMID 18755391.
  5. "Factsheet about leptospirosis". European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Page last updated 26 Jun 2017
  6. Sweeney, Daniel A.; Hicks, Caitlin W.; Cui, Xizhong; Li, Yan; Eichacker, Peter Q. (2011-12-15). "Anthrax Infection". American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 184 (12): 1333–1341. doi:10.1164/rccm.201102-0209CI. ISSN 1073-449X. PMC 3361358. PMID 21852539.
  7. Tavassoli, F.A.; Devilee, P., eds. (2003). World Health Organization Classification of Tumours: Pathology & Genetics: Tumours of the breast and female genital organs. Lyon: IARC Press. ISBN 978-92-832-2412-9.
  8. Thompson LD, Nelson BL, Barnes EL (Mar 2004). "Ceruminous adenomas: a clinicopathologic study of 41 cases with a review of the literature". Am J Surg Pathol. 28 (3): 308–18. doi:10.1097/00000478-200403000-00003. PMID 15104293.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.