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International Journal of Surgery Case... May 2024Fibroma, thecoma, and fibrothecoma collectively denote a range of non-cancerous sex cord-stromal tumors distinguished by the presence of fibroblastic stromal cells...
INTRODUCTION AND IMPORTANCE
Fibroma, thecoma, and fibrothecoma collectively denote a range of non-cancerous sex cord-stromal tumors distinguished by the presence of fibroblastic stromal cells and/or cells resembling luteinized theca cells.
CASE PRESENTATION
In this report, we present a case study of a 52-year-old patient in whom this uncommon tumor was identified via MRI, highlighting the distinctive diagnostic and treatment considerations associated with it.
CLINICAL DISCUSSION
Ovarian fibrothecoma tumors are infrequent, constituting less than 4 % of all ovarian tumors. Although they may manifest at any age, they are more commonly observed in elderly and post-menopausal individuals. Diagnosis hinges on clinical and paraclinical data, yet definitive confirmation is predominantly achieved through anatomopathological examination. For younger patients, conservative surgery is usually favored, whereas peri- or post-menopausal individuals may undergo radical treatment.
CONCLUSION
Ovarian Fibrothecoma, though rare, are typically benign tumors frequently found in older patients. Diagnosis primarily relies on histological examination. Fortunately, the prognosis for these tumors is generally favorable.
PubMed: 38810296
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2024.109771 -
Revista Paulista de Pediatria : Orgao... 2024Pediatric cardiac tumors are rare and, among them, 90% are benign. Cardiac fibroma is the second most frequent tumor, after rhabdomyoma. The objective of this study is...
OBJECTIVE
Pediatric cardiac tumors are rare and, among them, 90% are benign. Cardiac fibroma is the second most frequent tumor, after rhabdomyoma. The objective of this study is to report a case of cardiac fibroma diagnosed incidentally in a patient admitted with acute viral bronchiolitis.
CASE DESCRIPTION
A 5-month-old male infant was admitted to the pediatric emergency department with acute viral bronchiolitis requiring hospitalization. He presented a detectable respiratory syncytial virus in oropharyngeal swab, blood test with lymphocytosis and a chest radiography revealed cardiomegaly. Further cardiologic testing was performed detecting elevation of cardiac biomarkers, an electrocardiogram with alteration of left ventricular repolarization and echocardiogram with a heterogeneous mass in the left ventricular, with areas of calcification. A chest angiotomography suggested rhabdomyosarcoma or cardiac fibroma and a magnetic resonance showed a mass, with characteristics suggesting fibroma. The final diagnosis was made after two cardiac catheterizations for biopsy of the lesion, confirming cardiac fibroma by anatomopathological examination. Because the patient had moderate to severe systolic dysfunction, he was submitted to heart transplant.
COMMENTS
One third of cardiac fibromas are asymptomatic, generally diagnosed late through tests ordered for other reasons. The gold-standard test for definitive diagnosis is biopsy. Cardiac fibroma usually does not present spontaneous regression and, in most cases, partial or total surgical resection is necessary. When tumors are unresectable, heart transplantation should be indicated. It is essential to have detailed characterization of the cardiac mass to establish the most appropriate therapeutic approach for each patient.
Topics: Humans; Male; Heart Neoplasms; Fibroma; Infant; Incidental Findings; Bronchiolitis, Viral; Acute Disease
PubMed: 38808864
DOI: 10.1590/1984-0462/2024/42/2022157 -
Heliyon May 2024Accurate segmentation is crucial in diagnosing and analyzing skin lesions. However, automatic segmentation of skin lesions is extremely challenging because of their...
Accurate segmentation is crucial in diagnosing and analyzing skin lesions. However, automatic segmentation of skin lesions is extremely challenging because of their variable sizes, uneven color distributions, irregular shapes, hair occlusions, and blurred boundaries. Owing to the limited range of convolutional networks receptive fields, shallow convolution cannot extract the global features of images and thus has limited segmentation performance. Because medical image datasets are small in scale, the use of excessively deep networks could cause overfitting and increase computational complexity. Although transformer networks can focus on extracting global information, they cannot extract sufficient local information and accurately segment detailed lesion features. In this study, we designed a dual-branch encoder that combines a convolution neural network (CNN) and a transformer. The CNN branch of the encoder comprises four layers, which learn the local features of images through layer-wise downsampling. The transformer branch also comprises four layers, enabling the learning of global image information through attention mechanisms. The feature fusion module in the network integrates local features and global information, emphasizes important channel features through the channel attention mechanism, and filters irrelevant feature expressions. The information exchange between the decoder and encoder is finally achieved through skip connections to supplement the information lost during the sampling process, thereby enhancing segmentation accuracy. The data used in this paper are from four public datasets, including images of melanoma, basal cell tumor, fibroma, and benign nevus. Because of the limited size of the image data, we enhanced them using methods such as random horizontal flipping, random vertical flipping, random brightness enhancement, random contrast enhancement, and rotation. The segmentation accuracy is evaluated through intersection over union and duration, integrity, commitment, and effort indicators, reaching 87.7 % and 93.21 %, 82.05 % and 89.19 %, 86.81 % and 92.72 %, and 92.79 % and 96.21 %, respectively, on the ISIC 2016, ISIC 2017, ISIC 2018, and PH2 datasets, respectively (code: https://github.com/hyjane/CCT-Net).
PubMed: 38807881
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e31395 -
BMC Medical Genomics May 2024Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a rare, autosomal dominant genetic disease that arises from TSC1 or TSC2 genetic mutations. These genetic mutations can induce the... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a rare, autosomal dominant genetic disease that arises from TSC1 or TSC2 genetic mutations. These genetic mutations can induce the development of benign tumors in any organ system with significant clinical implications in morbidity and mortality. In rare instances, patients with TSC can have malignant tumors, including renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor (PNET). It is considered a hereditary renal cancer syndrome despite the low incidence of RCC in TSC patients. TSC is typically diagnosed in prenatal and pediatric patients and frequently associated with neurocognitive disorders and seizures, which are often experienced early in life. However, penetrance and expressivity of TSC mutations are highly variable. Herein, we present a case report, with associated literature, to highlight that there exist undiagnosed adult patients with less penetrant features, whose clinical presentation may contain non-classical signs and symptoms, who have pathogenic TSC mutations.
CASE PRESENTATION
A 31-year-old female with past medical history of leiomyomas status post myomectomy presented to the emergency department for a hemorrhagic adnexal cyst. Imaging incidentally identified a renal mass suspicious for RCC. Out of concern for hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) syndrome, the mass was surgically removed and confirmed as RCC. Discussion with medical genetics ascertained a family history of kidney cancer and nephrectomy procedures and a patient history of ungual fibromas on the toes. Genetic testing for hereditary kidney cancer revealed a 5'UTR deletion in the TSC1 gene, leading to a diagnosis of TSC. Following the diagnosis, dermatology found benign skin findings consistent with TSC. About six months after the incidental finding of RCC, a PNET in the pancreatic body/tail was incidentally found on chest CT imaging, which was removed and determined to be a well-differentiated PNET. Later, a brain MRI revealed two small cortical tubers, one in each frontal lobe, that were asymptomatic; the patient's history and family history did not contain seizures or learning delays. The patient presently shows no evidence of recurrence or metastatic disease, and no additional malignant tumors have been identified.
CONCLUSIONS
To our knowledge, this is the first report in the literature of a TSC patient without a history of neurocognitive disorders with RCC and PNET, both independently rare occurrences in TSC. The patient had a strong family history of renal disease, including RCC, and had several other clinical manifestations of TSC, including skin and brain findings. The incidental finding and surgical removal of RCC prompted the genetic evaluation and diagnosis of TSC, leading to a comparably late diagnosis for this patient. Reporting the broad spectrum of disease for TSC, including more malignant phenotypes such as the one seen in our patient, can help healthcare providers better identify patients who need genetic evaluation and additional medical care.
Topics: Humans; Tuberous Sclerosis; Female; Adult; Kidney Neoplasms; Carcinoma, Renal Cell; Tuberous Sclerosis Complex 2 Protein; Tuberous Sclerosis Complex 1 Protein; Mutation
PubMed: 38802873
DOI: 10.1186/s12920-024-01913-8 -
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial... 2024Sclerosing odontogenic carcinoma (SOC) was first described by Koutlas . in 2008. Despite its inclusion in the World Health Organization (WHO) as a distinct entity, it is...
Sclerosing odontogenic carcinoma (SOC) was first described by Koutlas . in 2008. Despite its inclusion in the World Health Organization (WHO) as a distinct entity, it is a tumour that remains poorly defined in the literature, with only 10 reported cases to date. The mandibular premolar and molar region is more commonly affected compared to the maxilla. In the maxilla, the anterior and the molar regions are most commonly affected. This article describes a case report of a Sclerosing Odontogenic Carcinoma in a 50 year old male patient in the mandibular region. The radiograph showed a well-defined radiolucency extending from the left ramus of the mandible to the right lower molar region. SOC is low grade with mild atypia and frequent mitosis and diffused infiltrative and perineural spread.
PubMed: 38800446
DOI: 10.4103/jomfp.jomfp_128_21 -
Heliyon May 2024This study aimed to assess the surgical outcomes and identify the conversion risk factors of Transvaginal Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (vNOTES) in...
OBJECTIVE
This study aimed to assess the surgical outcomes and identify the conversion risk factors of Transvaginal Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (vNOTES) in treating ovarian cyst.
METHODS
This was a retrospective study of 505 patients who underwent vNO TES for treating ovarian cyst from March 2019 to February 2022 wherein the patients were classified into "converted" or "nonconverted" groups. T-tests, χ tests, and logistic regression were used for statistical analyses.
RESULTS
There were 16 (3.17 %) surgical conversions and 12 (2.38 %) other surgical complications in our study cohort. Teratomas accounted for 56.8 % of complications in nonconverted cases and 18.8 % in converted cases. Adenocystomas were found in 12.3 % of nonconverted cases and 18.8 % of converted cases. Other types included paraovarian cysts (3.3 % and 0 %), fibroma, granulosa cell tumor, Brenner tumor (1.2 % and 0 %), corpus luteum cysts, follicular cysts (7.6 % and 6.3 %), old abscess (0.2 % and 0 %), and simple cysts (17.6 % and 12.5 %) in the nonconverted and converted groups, respectively. The converted group included more cases of endometriotic cysts (43.8 % vs 12.3 %, p = 0.023), bilateral cysts (37.5 % vs 8.2 %, p < 0.001), severe pelvic adhesion (68.8 % vs 3.3 %, p < 0.001), deep endometriosis (12.5 % vs 0.4 %, p < 0.001), and at least two cysts (37.5 % vs 8.81 %; p < 0.001). Severe pelvic adhesion (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 86.96; range, 18.33-431.77; p < 0.001), bilateral cysts (adjusted OR, 4.75; range, 1.05-21.57, p = 0.043) and endometriotic cysts (adjusted OR, 7.69; range, 3.11-17.08; p < 0.001) were also predictors of surgical conversion.
CONCLUSION
vNOTES demonstrates low complication and conversion rates in treating ovarian cyst compared with TU-LESS. Surgical conversion is associated with severe pelvic adhesions, bilateral cysts, and endometriotic cysts.
PubMed: 38774314
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e31014 -
Cureus Apr 2024Peripheral odontogenic fibroma (POF) is described as a relatively rare, benign, extraosseous odontogenic tumor derived from odontogenic ectomesenchyme. It is...
Peripheral odontogenic fibroma (POF) is described as a relatively rare, benign, extraosseous odontogenic tumor derived from odontogenic ectomesenchyme. It is characterized by a mature fibrous stroma with embedded inactive resting islands of odontogenic epithelium. In the category of peripheral/extraosseous neoplasms, odontogenic fibroma (OF) is one of the most prevalent tumors. The radiographic examination shows minimum bone loss in the alveolar crest area. It poses a diagnostic challenge for clinicians and pathologists because its clinical and radiological aspects are similar to other peripheral odontogenic as well as non-odontogenic tumors, and the differential diagnosis is predicated on histological assessment. Histopathological examination is the key to a final confirmed diagnosis. This article presents a case report of a 53-year-old male who reported a painless, pale pink mass in the maxillary anterior region. We emphasize the clinicopathological, radiographical, and histopathological aspects of the rare entity of POF.
PubMed: 38741876
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.58154 -
Indian Journal of Dental Research :... Oct 2023Ossifying fibromas are rare, non-aggressive benign tumours of the bone, commonly involving the posterior mandible in middle-aged individuals with a female predilection.
INTRODUCTION
Ossifying fibromas are rare, non-aggressive benign tumours of the bone, commonly involving the posterior mandible in middle-aged individuals with a female predilection.
FINDINGS
Clinical manifestations include asymptomatic expansion of the mandible with infrequent maxillary lesions, pain, malocclusion, and compromised quality of life including aesthetic perception. Owing to multiplicity of features, tendency of recurrence, and possibility of malignant transformation, the diagnosis, treatment, and post-operative management of ossifying fibroma are always a challenge.
TAKEAWAY LESSONS
Study aims to report a clinical case of extensive swelling involving the coronoid process and condyle on the right side to crossing the mid-line of the mandible with compromised functions and aesthetics. The article describes the clinical, histopathological, and radiological features of the case. The possible treatment and challenges encountered are discussed.
Topics: Humans; Fibroma, Ossifying; Mandibular Neoplasms; Female; Radiography, Panoramic; Adult
PubMed: 38739833
DOI: 10.4103/ijdr.ijdr_134_21 -
Cureus Apr 2024This study aims to investigate the co-existence of ovarian teratomas with other benign or malignant gynecological tumors in women who underwent gynecological surgery.
INTRODUCTION
This study aims to investigate the co-existence of ovarian teratomas with other benign or malignant gynecological tumors in women who underwent gynecological surgery.
METHODS
We retrospectively reviewed all women who underwent gynecological surgery over a 15-year period. Pre-operative, surgical, and histological records were obtained from women who presented with gynecological pathology, aiming to discover a possible link between ovarian teratomas and other gynecological tumors.
RESULTS
Of the total patient sample, 288 (8.2%) had a mature teratoma, and 9 (0.3%) had an immature teratoma. The mean age was 38.0±13.3 years and 30.9±11.1 years, respectively. Women with mature teratoma showed a positive correlation with struma ovarii (SO, p=0.001). Moreover, we reported a positive linear relationship between struma ovarri and thecoma. Of the 288 women with a mature teratoma, 1 (0.3%) had co-existent endometrioid ovarian cancer, and 1 (0.3%) had borderline cancer. There were 14 women (4.9%) with a co-existent serous cystadenoma, 7 (2.4%) with a mucin cystadenoma, 1 (0.3%) with a thecoma, 4 (1.4%) with struma ovarii, 3 (1.0%) had Brenner cyst, 3 (1.0%) had ovarian fibroma, 2 had endometriosis (0.7%), and 8 (2.8%) had endometriomas. Of a total of nine women with immature teratomas, one (11.1%) had a serous cystadenoma.
CONCLUSIONS
Ovarian teratomas may co-exist with other gynecological diseases. Our study reports various cases of the co-existence of several gynecological tumors with teratomas.
PubMed: 38737998
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.58068 -
Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) Apr 2024Breast cancer stands as the primary cause of cancer-related mortality among women worldwide, often presenting with distant metastases upon diagnosis. Ovarian metastases...
Breast cancer stands as the primary cause of cancer-related mortality among women worldwide, often presenting with distant metastases upon diagnosis. Ovarian metastases originating from breast cancer represent a range of 3-30% of all ovarian neoplasms. Case Report: Herein, we present the histopathological, histochemical, and immunohistochemical findings of a rare case involving mucin-producing lobular breast carcinoma metastasizing to an ovarian fibroma in an 82-year-old female previously diagnosed with lobular breast carcinoma. Histopathological examination of the excised tissues revealed a biphasic neoplasm characterized by tumor cells expressing AE-1/AE-3 cytokeratin, mammaglobin, GCDFP-15, inhibin, and calretinin. Positive mucin staining was observed using histochemical techniques, and reticulin fibers were demonstrated using the Gordon-Sweets technique. A final diagnosis of mucin-producing lobular breast carcinoma metastatic to a benign ovarian fibroma was rendered. Conclusion: The occurrence of metastatic breast carcinoma overlaid on an ovarian tumor represents a rare and diagnostically challenging scenario.
PubMed: 38732367
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics14090953