Background: Spontaneous rapture of a germ cell tumor (GCT) metastases causing massive hemoretroperitoneum in a patient without choriocarcinoma component who has not received previous systemic chemotherapy is an exceedingly rare event. In such a devastating case scenario, a high index of clinical suspicion for early diagnosis and appropriate management is crucial.
Case Presentation: We report on a 25-year-old male patient with a 4-month history of orchiectomy for testicular GCT (tGCT), who presented in the emergency department with acute abdomen and hemodynamic instability.
The "artery-first" approach pancreaticoduodenectomy, with maximal mesopancreas excision and central vascular ligation, represents the current principal determinants of radicality in pancreatic head cancer resection. However, these modifications at the resection stage of pancreaticoduodenectomy constitute extremely demanding and technically complicated procedures. Among the most critical contributing factors in the difficulty of artery-first approaches is the spiral configuration of the mesoduodenum and proximal mesojejunum around the superior mesenteric artery axis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA typical bile duct branching patterns represent one of the major causes of bile duct injury (BDI) during laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC). The most common classified variations of bile duct branching, involve the right posterior sectoral duct (RPSD) and its joining with the right anterior or left hepatic duct. Variant bile duct anatomy can rarely be extremely complex and unclassified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hilar cholangiocarcinoma (HC), also referred to as Altemeier-Klatskins tumour, is a lethal primary extrahepatic carcinoma of biliary epithelial origin, arising within 2cm of the hilar confluence. Radical surgical excision provides the best chance for a cure; however, the management of patients with HC is challenging not only because of the need for a high level of skill in biliary and hepatic resections, but also because of the difficulty in reaching an accurate diagnosis preoperatively. In fact, the differential diagnosis of HC is a diagnostic dilemma which is currently persisting, as modern, sophisticated diagnostic modalities are not always able to provide a definitive preoperative diagnosis.
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