The patient was a 79-year-old man who underwent right extrapleural lucite ball plombage for pulmonary tuberculosis at aged 19. He was followed BPH with medication from May 2008 at our hospital. He presented with macrohematuria in January 2010, but cystoscopy and CT scan showed no significant abnormalities. He was admitted to complaining of general fatigue and anemia in February 2010. TURBT was performed 10 days after admission, and showed the bleeding sites with oozing in mucosa at the bilateral and posterior wall of the bladder. Neither CT nor cytological examinations were helpful in diagnosing this disease, although histological observation implied a possibility of malignant vasoformative tumor. He died one month after admission. Autopsy revealed a huge bloody mass at the right upper thoracic wall and same metastatic tumors of both adrenals, the bone, the stomach and the urinary bladder. Microscopic examination revealed that atypical cells had proliferated and formed vascular structures, which were stained positively with CD31, and vimentin. Finally, the diagnosis was made of pleural angiosarcoma and multiple metastasis. Metastatic angiosarcoma of the bladder is very rare and difficult to make definite diagnosis, however we have to keep in mind the presence of this disease.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5980/jpnjurol.102.686 | DOI Listing |
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