The clinical aspect of the disease is similar to that of biliary lithiasis and the diagnosis is easily made by the characteristic spontaneous opacification of the gall bladder on plain abdominal X-rays. Complications such as acute cholecystitis, pancreatitis or obstructive jaundice can also be present. Although some cases of conservative pharmaceutical treatment as well as cases of spontaneous disappearance of limy bile have been reported, surgical treatment remains the treatment of choice.
Patient: Female, 27Final Diagnosis: Invasive thyroglossal duct cyst papillary carcinomaSymptoms: Painless cervical enlargementMedication: —Clinical Procedure: Sistrunk’s procedureSpecialty: SurgeryObjective:Rare diseaseBackground:Thyroglossal duct cyst is a common congenital anomaly of the thyroid gland, usually found centrally. The presence of malignancy occurring in a thyroglossal duct cyst is a rare condition, accounting only for 1% of all cases of thyroglossal duct cyst. This report is of a rare case of papillary carcinoma arising in a thyroglossal duct cyst and includes a review of the literature.Case Report:A 27-year-old female patient was referred to our department with a painless cystic mass in the neck. After initial physical examination and endocrinology investigations, a fine needle aspiration (FNA) of the cyst was performed. Cytology showed a papillary neoplasm. The patient underwent total thyroidectomy and surgical excision of the thyroglossal duct cyst (the Sistrunk’s procedure). Histopathology of the surgical excision specimen showed a thyroglossal duct cyst with a maximum diameter of 7.5 cm containing a primary invasive papillary carcinoma, measuring 1.5 cm in diameter that infiltrated into the cyst wall. The remaining thyroid gland was normal.Conclusions:Thyroglossal duct carcinoma, most commonly papillary carcinoma, is a rare condition that should be considered in patients presenting with cystic midline neck masses. Surgery and complete excision is the main treatment and the optimal patient management includes multidisciplinary consultation in order to improve survival. The diagnosis of malignancy is made postoperatively, as in the present case.
We report a case of a 70-year-old man with renal cell carcinoma and metastasis to the pancreas. Symptomatic patients usually present with obstructive jaundice, abdominal pain, or GI bleeding. The diagnosis usually occurs in asymptomatic patients during followup for renal cell carcinoma. It usually befalls slowly from 2 to 18 years after the onset of the primary tumor of the kidney. A 70-year-old man presented in our department with weight loss, anorexia, and elevated blood glucose, having a large tumor on the head of the pancreas treated successfully by pancreatoduodenectomy. Three years after his treatment, the patient is doing well and without recurrence of the tumor. In conclusion, metastasis of renal cell carcinoma to the pancreas is a rare neoplasm accounting for 0.25–3% of all pancreatic tumors.
Gastrosplenic fistulas are rare complications of malignant gastric or splenic diseases and, less frequently, are the result of benign diseases such as gastric ulcers and Crohn's disease. Spontaneous gastrosplenic fistula as a result of splenic abcess has not been reported in the literature so far. A 70-year-old man presented with a splenic abscess which had spontaneously developed a gastrosplenic fistula. The fistula was diagnosed by computed tomography scan and upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and was successfully managed by splenectomy with en bloc resection of part of the greater curvature of the stomach. Although gastrosplenic fistulas are a relatively rare complication of gastric or splenic diseases, an awareness might lead the clinician to early recognition and surgery can be offered earlier as the treatment of choice.
INTRODUCTIONInguinal hernia containing bladder carcinoma is a very rare occurrence.PRESENTATION OF CASEWe report a case of a male patient who presented with a left groin hernia containing an irregular mass. The hernia was repaired without the use of mesh and a partial cystectomy was done.DISCUSSIONOnly 1–3% of all inguinal hernias involve the bladder, with very few reports containing a carcinoma.CONCLUSIONTreatment consists of removing the tumor and repairing the hernia.
Penetrating abdominal injury during pregnancy is extremely rare. The case of an 18-year-old primigravid woman at 29 weeks' gestation is presented who sustained a low-velocity handgun penetrating liver injury. Due to her hemodynamic stability, absence of fetal distress and also absence of radiographic and clinical signs of hollow viscus injury, the patient was conservatively treated and discharged in perfect condition on the 10th day following admission.
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