AI Article Synopsis

  • A 74-year-old woman was referred for colonography due to stool occult blood, leading to the discovery of a 3 cm submucosal tumor in her sigmoid colon via colonoscopy.
  • Endoscopic ultrasonography suggested it might be a gastrointestinal stromal, myogenic, or neurogenic tumor, prompting a laparoscopic sigmoidectomy with D2 lymph node dissection.
  • The tumor was confirmed as a benign schwannoma through immunostaining, and the laparoscopic approach with fewer ports was highlighted as advantageous for cosmetic outcomes and less postoperative pain compared to traditional methods.

Article Abstract

A 74-year-old woman who developed schwannoma of the sigmoid colon was referred to our hospital for colonography to determine the cause of her stool occult blood. Colonoscopy revealed a submucosal tumor, which measured 3 cm in diameter, in the sigmoid colon. Endoscopic ultrasonography revealed a low echoic, homogeneous and demarcated submucosal tumor that continued into the fourth layer of the colonic wall. Gastrointestinal stromal, myogenic or neurogenic tumor was suspected, and thus, laparoscopic sigmoidectomy was carried out. We used two ports during the operation, a SILS Port in the umbilical region and a 12-mm port in the right lower abdominal wall, and performed sigmoidectomy with D2 lymph node dissection. Histological findings revealed spindle-like tumor cells with multiform nuclei. The tumor was diagnosed by immunostaining as benign schwannoma of the sigmoid colon. The conventional surgical treatment for schwannoma of the digestive tract is partial resection, but if preoperative diagnosis is unknown, radical resection with lymphadenectomy is acceptable for submucosal tumors in the digestive tract. In this case, laparoscopic reduced port surgery using only one or two ports may be more feasible and beneficial with regard to cosmesis and reduced postoperative pain than conventional laparoscopic colectomy.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ases.12102DOI Listing

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