ABSTRACT
Hydatid disease is a worldwide zoonosis and is localized in the liver in most cases. Its complications are numerous and include those related to the compression of adjacent viscera, infection of the cyst's contents or perforation of the cyst. Spontaneous rupture of the hepatic hydatid cyst into the duodenum is an extremely rare complication. The communication is, typically, not discovered until surgery. We present two cases of perforation of a liver cyst into the duodenum. One of them was diagnosed pre-operatively by a barium study. The surgical treatment of the lesion and its complications was complex but successful in both cases
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Rupture, Spontaneous , Duodenal Diseases/diagnosis , Duodenum/pathology , Liver Abscess/pathology , Intestinal PerforationABSTRACT
Leiomyoma of the colon are rare benign smooth muscle tumours. Report a new case of colic leiomyoma revealed by gastrointestinal bleeding. A 71-year-old man, diabetic, consulted the emergencies for acute per-rectal bleeding. The physical examination was essentially normal. Haemoglobin level was 3.7g/dl.. The upper digestif endoscopy was normal. The colonoscopy showed an active bleeding from the right colon but it was enable to specify the nature and the exact seat of the bleeding lesion. An emergent operation showed a tumor of the right colic angle of 8 cm. A right hemicolectomy was performed with immediate ileocolic anastomosis. Pathology showed a leiomyoma. Postoperative course mentioned a nosocomial pneumopathy. Colic leiomyomas are rare benign tumours. The determination of the mitotic index is of primary importance to differentiate them from the leiomyosarcomas of low rank of malignancy whose prognosis is unfavourable
ABSTRACT
Primary carcinoid tumour of the liver is rare and poses a diagnostic and management dilemma. Report a new cases. A 48 year-old patient man, with a 8-months history of abdominal pain and weight loss, was operated on in December 2000, in another centre with the diagnosis of caudate pancreatic cancer. At laparotomy, Resection was deemed to be not feasible. Histological examination of biopsy was for carcinoid tumor. The patient underwent post operative radiotherapy and four courses of chemotherapy and he was referred to our hospital. Physical examination was normal. Based on radiological examination, the diagnosis was endocrine tumor of the pancreas. The patient underwent relaparotomy, the lesion was independent from the pancreas but linked to the liver; the caudate lobe. Complete macroscopic resection was performed. Histological examination of operative specimen concludes to carcinoid tumor with invasion of hepatic margins. The patient underwent adjuvant chemotherapy; he was free from disease 6 months after surgery. The diagnostic of primary carcinoid tumors is based principally in the histopathological confirmation of neuroendocrine origin and the exclusion of non hepatic primary tumour. This requires preoperative imaging but most importantly a thorough laparotomy and rigorous follow-up. Surgical resection if possible is recommended
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Carcinoid Tumor/surgery , Carcinoid Tumor/radiotherapy , Liver Neoplasms , Embolization, TherapeuticABSTRACT
We reported a case of patient born in 1967 who has been operated on in 1987 on three years after the beginning of ulcerative colitis which became severe and resistant to the medical treatment. A total colectomy with an ileo-rectal anastomosis had been performed. The pathological diagnosis carried of the specimen was Ulcerative colitis. Then a proctectomy. followed by ileo-anal anastomosis, was performed in 1993. After several episodes of pochitis and the appearance of intestinal lesions upstream the ileal pocket, the retained diagnosis was Crohns colitis. Eight years after the ileo-anal anastomosis, the patient developed an adenocarcinoma in the ileal pocket. He has been operated on in 2002 and he had abdominoperineal resection, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. He died in January 2003. The death was related to the recurrence of malignancy. Endoscopic controls with biopsies are mandatory doing to follow up dysplasia predictive of degeneration