Primary urethral melanoma is an exceptionally rare malignancy, comprising a small fraction of melanomas and malignant tumors affecting the female urethra. We report the case of a 74-year-old woman presenting with symptoms initially suggestive of a benign urethral caruncle, which was later diagnosed as nodular melanoma upon histopathological examination. Despite complete surgical excision, subsequent imaging revealed widespread metastases to lymph nodes, liver, lungs, and brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProstatic condyloma acuminata is a rarely encountered clinical manifestation primarily linked to low-risk subtypes of human papillomavirus (HPV), such as HPV-6 and HPV-11. Unlike the more common anogenital presentation, prostatic condyloma acuminata remains an infrequent phenomenon, necessitating a nuanced approach to diagnosis and management. We present a case report involving a 68-year-old patient with an intricate medical history, where the discovery of prostatic condyloma acuminata presented diagnostic challenges and clinical intricacies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis is a case report about a 44-year-old woman who sustained multiple stab wounds, resulting in an isolated right ureteral injury. Despite a precise diagnosis from an urgent CT scan showing contrast material extravasation, the patient's stable vital signs allowed for a thorough surgical exploration, leading to an accurate diagnosis. Immediate surgical repair of the right ureter using an end-to-end anastomosis following precise surgical principles achieved complete restoration of the initial injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction And Importance: Retroperitoneal ganglioneuroma is an infrequent, benign tumor originating from the sympathetic nervous system. The diagnosis predominantly relies on histological assessment, often as an incidental discovery. Surgical removal stands as the primary treatment modality, and the overall prognosis tends to be favorable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis is a case report about a patient presenting with a urachal mass mimicking a urachus adenocarcinoma. Cystoscopy showed a vesicourachal patent diverticulum. Histological findings after the removal of the umbilicus, urachus, urachal tumor, as well as a bladder cuff, consisted of a nonspecific polymorphous suppurative inflammatory infiltrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis is a case report about a patient which presents with two right renal tumors, one of them being an oncocytoma with typical histopathological features and renal vein extension. Recent studies show that despite renal vein thrombus being a histological sign of malignancy; when associated with renal oncocytoma, it should not alter the benign prognosis of oncocytoma, and a simple follow-up may be carried. Further explorations should be done when easily available, and when the histopathologic diagnosis of oncocytoma is uncertain, to rule out the differential diagnosis of a chromophobe renal cell carcinoma, oncocytic variant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF