Cargando…

A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.

Abdominal lymphangiomas are uncommon angiomatous tumor occurring mainly in childhood. This is a retrospective clinicopathologic study of 17 cases of abdominal lymphangioma. The patients included are five children and 12 adults, with a mean age at initial presentation of 30.7 years (age ranges 3-63)....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chung, J. H., Suh, Y. L., Park, I. A., Jang, J. J., Chi, J. G., Kim, Y. I., Kim, W. H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3054378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10402167
_version_ 1782199931284488192
author Chung, J. H.
Suh, Y. L.
Park, I. A.
Jang, J. J.
Chi, J. G.
Kim, Y. I.
Kim, W. H.
author_facet Chung, J. H.
Suh, Y. L.
Park, I. A.
Jang, J. J.
Chi, J. G.
Kim, Y. I.
Kim, W. H.
author_sort Chung, J. H.
collection PubMed
description Abdominal lymphangiomas are uncommon angiomatous tumor occurring mainly in childhood. This is a retrospective clinicopathologic study of 17 cases of abdominal lymphangioma. The patients included are five children and 12 adults, with a mean age at initial presentation of 30.7 years (age ranges 3-63). The locations of the tumors were mesentery (5), retroperitoneum (4), colon (3), omentum (3), mesocolon (1) and gallbladder (1). Infiltrative growth was more common pattern than entirely circumscribed pattern. Masses were mostly multilocular cysts and contained chyle or serous fluid. On immunohistochemical staining, 16 cases were reactive for either CD31 or factor VIII-related antigen. These fact would suggest that intra-abdominal lymphangiomas simulate the immunohistochemical features of collecting lymphatics. Follow up was possible in 12 cases for 3-50 months (mean 19 months) and only one patient showed local recurrence. Although abdominal lymphangiomas are rare in adulthood and correct preoperative diagnosis is difficult, awareness of such a possibility in adulthood will contribute to make a correct preoperative diagnosis.
format Text
id pubmed-3054378
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1999
publisher Korean Academy of Medical Sciences
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30543782011-03-15 A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas. Chung, J. H. Suh, Y. L. Park, I. A. Jang, J. J. Chi, J. G. Kim, Y. I. Kim, W. H. J Korean Med Sci Research Article Abdominal lymphangiomas are uncommon angiomatous tumor occurring mainly in childhood. This is a retrospective clinicopathologic study of 17 cases of abdominal lymphangioma. The patients included are five children and 12 adults, with a mean age at initial presentation of 30.7 years (age ranges 3-63). The locations of the tumors were mesentery (5), retroperitoneum (4), colon (3), omentum (3), mesocolon (1) and gallbladder (1). Infiltrative growth was more common pattern than entirely circumscribed pattern. Masses were mostly multilocular cysts and contained chyle or serous fluid. On immunohistochemical staining, 16 cases were reactive for either CD31 or factor VIII-related antigen. These fact would suggest that intra-abdominal lymphangiomas simulate the immunohistochemical features of collecting lymphatics. Follow up was possible in 12 cases for 3-50 months (mean 19 months) and only one patient showed local recurrence. Although abdominal lymphangiomas are rare in adulthood and correct preoperative diagnosis is difficult, awareness of such a possibility in adulthood will contribute to make a correct preoperative diagnosis. Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 1999-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3054378/ /pubmed/10402167 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Chung, J. H.
Suh, Y. L.
Park, I. A.
Jang, J. J.
Chi, J. G.
Kim, Y. I.
Kim, W. H.
A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
title A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
title_full A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
title_fullStr A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
title_full_unstemmed A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
title_short A pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
title_sort pathologic study of abdominal lymphangiomas.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3054378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10402167
work_keys_str_mv AT chungjh apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT suhyl apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT parkia apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT jangjj apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT chijg apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT kimyi apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT kimwh apathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT chungjh pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT suhyl pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT parkia pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT jangjj pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT chijg pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT kimyi pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas
AT kimwh pathologicstudyofabdominallymphangiomas