AI Article Synopsis

  • Unicentric Castleman's disease is a rare, non-cancerous disorder that can be cured by surgical removal, but poses a risk of heavy bleeding during surgery due to its high blood vessel density.
  • A case of this disease, specifically the hyaline-vascular type in the mediastinum, was successfully treated using video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery after performing preoperative embolization to minimize bleeding.
  • The case highlights the importance of evaluating tumor vascularity before surgery and suggests that Castleman's disease should be included in the considerations for hypervascular tumors in the mediastinum.

Article Abstract

Unicentric Castleman's disease is a rare, benign lymphoproliferative disorder that is curable with surgical resection. However, significant bleeding often occurs during surgery because of tumor hypervascularity. We herein present a case of hyaline-vascular-type mediastinal unicentric Castleman's disease, successfully resected using video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery with preoperative embolization. In the present case, tumor hypervascularity and feeding vessels were revealed by computed tomography (CT), which led us to perform preoperative angiography and embolization to the tumor feeding arteries to reduce intraoperative bleeding. Castleman's disease should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hypervascular mediastinal tumors. Tumor vascularity should be assessed prior to surgery, and preoperative embolization should be considered.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3806124PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/354507DOI Listing

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