Report of a 3-month old girl child who died due to multi-systemic infection of cytomegalovirus (CMV) involving the lungs, liver and kidneys along with pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PJP). The mother of the child tested positive for CMV IgG and HIV with a very low CD4 count (160/ μl). Co-infection of cytomegalovirus and pneumocystis jiroveci always occurs in the setting of immunocompromise. Congenital CMV infection is transmitted through the placenta, especially during the first trimester and causes severe multi-systemic disease whereas perinatal infection is acquired during childbirth/ breastfeeding where the babies have maternal protective antibodies leading to much milder or asymptomatic infection. PJP is more common in infancy and presents as hypoxic pneumonia. CMV causes cyto-nucleomegaly and classic "owl's eye" inclusions on histology while PJP presents with characteristic fluffy "cotton ball" alveolar exudates.
Ameloblastoma is an aggressive odontogenic tumor, which arises from odontogenic epithelium. Ameloblastomas can present in several clinical and histomorphological patterns. The granular cell variant accounts for only 3.5% to 5% of ameloblastomas. We have presented two cases of granular cell ameloblastoma (GCA) occurring in a 44-year-old and 50-year-old man, respectively. Case No. 1 on incisional biopsy was diagnosed as unicystic ameloblastoma (UA), which later after excisional biopsy was finally diagnosed as GCA owing to the features observed in excisional biopsied tissue. Case No. 2 on incisional biopsy showed darker and lighter stained cells arranged in small follicular pattern, and anastomosing cords. Meticulous immunohistochemistry, histochemical examination and careful literature search helped us to diagnose it as GCA. We have made an attempt to elucidate the diagnosis of GCA especially in cases of GCA with unusual granular component.