RESUMO
Primary splenic angiosarcoma (PSA) is a rare neoplasm of vascular origin associated with aggressive behavior and poor prognosis. The clinical presentation is usually non-specific and is mostly characterized by a wasting disease with anemia and splenomegaly, mimicking a wide range of entities. The authors present the case of an 80-year-old woman with cardiovascular comorbidities with a 6-month history of weight loss, fatigue, weakness, pallor, and abdominal pain. The physical examination showed massive splenomegaly and pallor. After a thorough evaluation that ruled out lymphoproliferative diseases, the working diagnosis was a myelodysplastic disorder. A few days after discharge, she returned to the emergency room with severe abdominal pain, worsening fatigue, and a remarkable pallor. Point-of-care ultrasound showed free intraperitoneal fluid. Spleen rupture was confirmed by abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan, and an emergency laparotomy with splenectomy was performed. The postoperative period was uneventful, and the patient recovered in a few days. The histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of PSA and the patient was referred to an oncological center. Two months later staging CT demonstrated liver and peritoneal metastases, and despite the chemotherapy she died 6 months after the diagnosis.
RESUMO
Schistosomiasis is one of the most common parasitic diseases, still considered of public health significance. Acute schistosomiasis is of difficult diagnosis and therefore has been overlooked, misdiagnosed, underestimated and underreported in endemic areas. The delay between the exposure to contaminated water and the initial symptoms may explain this challenging diagnosis. Acute schistosomiasis is frequently reported in non-immune individuals while reinfection cases occurring in endemic areas is scarcely documented. The later usually shows a benign course but fatal cases do exist. The authors report a case of a young female patient, in the late puerperium, with a three-month history of weight loss, intermittent fever, cough, thoracic and abdominal pain and increased abdominal girth. Physical examination showed a tachycardia, tachypnea and hypotension. Laboratory tests showed a mild anemia, eosinophilia, and a slightly elevation of liver enzymes. Thorax and abdominal multidetector computed tomography evidenced a diffuse and bilateral pulmonary micronodules and peritoneal and intestinal wall thickening. The patient progressed rapidly to hepatic insufficiency, and death after respiratory insufficiency. An autopsy was performed and the findings were compatible with acute Schistosomiasis in a patient previously exposed to Schistosoma mansoni.