-->
Home > D. Systemic pathology > angiocentric lymphomas

| PubMed | eMedicine | OMIM | Google | Google images | Yahoo images | YouTube |

  • Printer friendly version

angiocentric lymphomas

Angiocentric lymphomas are a heterogeneous spectrum of hematolymphoid malignancies that share a particular histologic characteristic, namely, an angiocentric or perivascular growth pattern. They include a variety of T-cell lymphomas, B-cell lymphomas, and natural killer-cell derived lymphomas (NK/T-cell lymphomas).

The term angiocentric lymphomas was initially used to refer to natural killer and natural killer-like T-cell lymphomas that show a prominent angiocentric growth pattern.

Classification

- T-cell angiocentric lymphoma

- B-cell angiocentric lymphoma

- angiocentric NK-cell lymphoma

Localization

- pulmonary angiocentric lymphoma
- cutaneous angiocentric lymphoma

References

- Natkunam Y, Warnke RA. Angiocentric lymphomas (lymphomatous vasculitis). Semin Diagn Pathol. 2001 Feb;18(1):67-77. PMID: 11296995