This report describes a rare case of a young woman with massive intra-abdominal bleeding due to a giant ruptured hepatocellular adenoma. The patient had never used oral contraceptive pills and she was urgently operated for haemorrhage control in another hospital where the left hepatic artery was also ligated. After haemodynamic stabilization in the ICU and because of a complicated postoperative course (signs of intraabdominal sepsis) she was transferred to our hospital and a left lobectomy was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA granular cell tumor (GCT; myoblastoma) was diagnosed on the tongue of a 12-year-old English Pointer with clinical signs of mild oral dysphagia. The diagnosis was confirmed by histopathologic examination and immunohistochemistry. The tumor was positive for S-100 protein, but also was positive for desmin, and was only weakly positive for PAS, which is unusual for GCTs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to enhance our understanding of the pathways of lymphatic spread of primary carcinomas in the upper abdomen by recognizing the development, configuration, and frequency of nodal enlargement in discrete anatomic regions. The study included 417 patients with histologically confirmed carcinomas (CC) of the stomach (n = 267), liver (n = 98), gallbladder (n = 25), and bile ducts (n = 27). All patients were studied by high-resolution CT and tumor extension to the lymph nodes of the subperitoneal space was clearly identified in 59 patients [33 with CC of the stomach, 8 with CC of the gallbladder, 3 with CC of the bile ducts, and 15 with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)].
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