A case of true pancreaticoduodenal artery (PDA) aneurysm is reported. A calcified lesion was initially detected by plain x-ray films, and an essential diagnosis was made before operation by intravenous digital subtraction angiography (IVDSA). Surgical resection of the aneurysm was performed successfully. Additionally, we reviewed a total of 82 cases with PDA aneurysm out of the 88 cases that had been reported in the English-language literature up to 1993. Fifty-three cases were accompanied by aneurysmal rupture (rupture group), and 29, including our case, were without rupture (nonrupture group). Because of the high mortality rate (49.1%) in the rupture group, a precise diagnosis and adequate treatment of PDA aneurysm before rupture is important. In the nonrupture group, a calcification on radiography appeared in 61.6% of the cases in which aneurysms were not found incidentally; this seems to be a significant indication for angiography. Moreover, intravenous digital subtraction angiography is quite useful for the screening of PDA aneurysm because it is an easy and noninvasive examination.
Abstract:We report a surgically resected case of adenosquamous carcinoma of the gallbladder accompanied by portal tumor thrombosis, which is regarded as a rare complication. A 73-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of epigastralgia. Preoperative examinations led to a diagnosis of advanced gallbladder carcinoma with liver metastasis, and operation was performed. Since intraoperative ultrasonography showed a tumor thrombus in the left main portal trunk originating from the metastatic lesion in the left medial segment of the liver, extended left lobectomy with extrahepatic bile duct resection and lymph node dissection was performed, instead of right trisegmentectomy, as proposed preoperatively. Histological examination revealed adenosquamous carcinoma of the gallbladder with medullary growth that was similar to the hepatocellular carcinoma, most notably in the metastatic lesion of the liver and in the portal tumor thrombus. We discuss the relation between portal tumor thrombosis and medullary tumors, and note the atypical operative method employed.
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