How is eosinophilic lymphogranuloma treated?

Eosinophilic lymphogranuloma, also called eosinophilic lymphogranuloma, was described in more detail by Kimura (Kimura), so the disease is also called Kimura’s disease. The disease has two characteristic laboratory tests: peripheral blood eosinophilia (10%-70%), which decreases in most cases after removal of the tumor. Serum immunoglobulin tests with elevated IgE (800-3500 µg ml-1) are mostly considered non-specific IgE. The main clinical manifestations, mostly localized as masses are found, occurring under the skin mostly with an extremely scratchy sensation. The first symptom of a small intraoral hole, which I rarely see, must exclude malignant lymphoma. Treatment: It is essentially a benign lesion. However, the treatment can take small doses of radiotherapy and hormone therapy, and the effect is often obvious. If the effect is not good, chemotherapy can be considered. Surgery may be considered when significant occupancy is present.