RESUMEN
Introduction. Our objective is to report a case of an infrequent entity as the giant hydronephrosis. Case Report. We report the case of an 82-syear-old male referred for a poor general condition. A radiological study revealed a great left hydronephrosis secondary to an urothelial carcinoma. The patient died due to his poor general condition. A histological diagnosis revealed a transitional cell carcinoma of renal pelvis and ureter and atrophic renal parenchyma. Conclusion. Giant hydronephrosis represents a very often entity to be taken into account in cases with big cystic abdominal masses in absence of unilateral or bilateral kidney. Simple nephrectomy is the treatment of choice in most cases. Nevertheless, in cases of nonsubsidiary surgery, percutaneous drainage may be necessary.
RESUMEN
We report the extremely unusual occurrence of a cellular angiofibroma (CAF) with atypical (bizarre) cells in the spermatic cord. We present a 63-year-old man, who was referred to the Urology Service with a six-month history of a slowly growing painless nodule in the right inguino-scrotal area. The clinical impression was that of a lipoma. The mass was locally excised. Gross examination showed a well-circumscribed neoplasm attached to the spermatic cord and measuring 5cm in the greatest dimension. Microscopic examination of the tumor showed the appearance of CAF with scattered severely atypical (bizarre) cells distributed throughout the lesion. By immunohistochemistry, atypical cells showed diffuse expression of p16, CDK-4, CD34 and vimentin. Keratin AE1/AE3, S-100 protein, p53, and epithelial membrane antigen were negative. The patient is free of disease two months after tumor excision. To the best of our knowledge, this is the third case of CAF with atypical (bizarre) cells occurring in the paratesticular area. Pathologists should be aware of this morphological variation of CAF to avoid misdiagnosis and over-treatment.