Abstract: | The case of a woman presenting the clinical and pathologic phenomena of angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy (AILD) with dysproteinemia is reported. The patient developed lesions in the lymph nodes, skin, lungs, liver and spleen, and her response to steroid and cyclophosphamide therapy was poor. At autopsy, microscopic findings in the mediastinal and abdominal lymph nodes were consistent with the diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease. Whereas the development of immunoblastic lymphoma is frequent in AILD, Hodgkin's disease is far less common. It is argued that malignant lymphoma in AILD may be the consequence of chronically depressed lymphocyte functions. |