We describe the unusual case of a female patient with a history of two mature teratomas non-correlated in terms of location and occurrence. A 12-year-old girl presented at our consultation as a result of a growing tumor in the hypogastric region, with no further clinical signs. She had undergone surgery neonatally due to a mature cystic sacrococcygeal teratoma, which was fully removed. No clinical sequelae were noted and no additional treatment was required over a 10-year follow-up. Radiological examination showed a large 20 × 12 × 18 cm cystic mass extending from the pelvic region to the lower hemiabdomen, associated with two similar small formations adjacent to the right ovary. Tumor markers were negative, and a laparoscopic right salpingoophorectomy was carried out, with an excellent postoperative progression. Pathological examination revealed it was, again, a mature cystic teratoma. The genetic study ruled out causation in this respect.
Introduction: Postoperative rhabdomyolysis (RML) has been documented after several surgical procedures in adults. Musculo-skeletal remodeling after Nuss procedure for pectus excavatum (PE) could cause RML. We evaluated the incidence of RML after Nuss procedure in children. Methods: Prospective study from 2018 to 2021. We enrolled all otherwise healthy patients who underwent PE correction with only one bar. Studied variables included demographic and clinical data, duration of surgery, complications, and length of hospitalization. The patients included underwent serial measurements of serum creatine kinase (CK), troponin I, and NT-proBNP, serum creatinine (Cr), urea, and glomerular filtration rate (GRF) at 6, 48 hours postoperatively, and hospital discharge. Results: Forty-six patients met criteria (40 male/6 female), with a mean age of 15.1 ± 1.4 years. Mean duration of surgery was 74 ± 28 minutes, and length of hospitalization was 4.6 ± 1.6 days. RML was diagnosed in 30.4% of patients at 6 hours, 91.3% at 48 hours, and 21.7% at hospital discharge. Mean preoperative CK value was 181.1 ± 141.6 IU/L, and postoperative values were 863.3 ± 302.6 IU/L at 6h, 1675.2 ± 561 IU/L at 48h, and 850 ± 683.7 IU/L at hospital discharge, with statistically significant differences (p=0.001). High-sensitivity troponin I and NT-proBNP levels increased significantly during the postoperative time (p=0.001). Renal function remained stable (p=0.55). Conclusions: Nuss technique produces RML without kidney injury in healthy patients. This knowledge should be considered for patients at increased risk of developing acute kidney injury and other complications.
Describimos el inusual caso de una paciente con antecedente de dos teratomas maduros no relacionados en cuanto a su localización y debut. Una niña de 12 años consultó por la aparición de una tumoración en la región hipogástrica de crecimiento progresivo sin otra clínica asociada. Había sido intervenida por un teratoma quístico maduro sacrococcígeo en el periodo neonatal con su extirpación completa y, ausencia secuelas clínicas y tratamiento adicional durante diez años de seguimiento posterior. Los exámenes radiológicos mostraron una gran masa quística de 20 × 12 × 18 cm que se extendía entre la región pélvica y el hemiabdomen inferior, acompañada por otras dos pequeñas formaciones similares adyacentes al ovario derecho. Los marcadores tumorales resultaron negativos y se llevó a cabo una salpingooforectomía derecha laparoscópica con una excelente evolución postoperatoria. El examen histopatológico, de nuevo, informó la lesión como teratoma quístico maduro. El estudio genético descartó una posible causalidad en este ámbito.
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