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Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases

Abdominal elastotic deposits are uncommon lesions that often presents as polyps. They show three histological patterns: fibroelastosis, angioelastosis, and elastofibroma. We describe 23 cases including rare locations, such as mesentery, greater omentum, hernia sac, spleen, peripancreatic fat, and hy...

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Autores principales: Val-Bernal, José-Fernando, Mayorga, Marta María, García-Gutierrez, Francisco Javier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academy of Medical Sciences, Romanian Academy Publishing House, Bucharest 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8112749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33817725
http://dx.doi.org/10.47162/RJME.61.3.22
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author Val-Bernal, José-Fernando
Mayorga, Marta María
García-Gutierrez, Francisco Javier
author_facet Val-Bernal, José-Fernando
Mayorga, Marta María
García-Gutierrez, Francisco Javier
author_sort Val-Bernal, José-Fernando
collection PubMed
description Abdominal elastotic deposits are uncommon lesions that often presents as polyps. They show three histological patterns: fibroelastosis, angioelastosis, and elastofibroma. We describe 23 cases including rare locations, such as mesentery, greater omentum, hernia sac, spleen, peripancreatic fat, and hypodermal fat. The age of the patients ranged from 49 to 93 years (mean, 76.8 years). Most lesions were discovered incidentally in the microscopic study. The most frequent locations were peritoneal subserosa (43.5%) and mesentery/mesocolon/greater omentum (39.1%). The most common pattern was fibroelastosis (69.6%) followed by angioelastosis (26.1%). We observed one case of omental elastofibroma. A review of the 14 abdominal elastofibromas described including our case revealed that the age of the patients ranged from 45 to 88 years (mean, 68.5 years). Female predominance is striking (M:F, 1:12). The most common site was the stomach (50%). The greater omentum (14.3%), small intestine (7.1%), and pancreas (7.1%) are very rare sites for this lesion. Only one case before ours has been published in the greater omentum. The size of the lesions ranged from 0.7 cm to 8 cm (mean 3.2 cm). In 36.4% of the cases located in the digestive tract, the mucosa did not show alterations. Ulcerations (36.4%) or polypoid excrescences (18.2%) were mostly observed. Six (42.9%) cases were asymptomatic and six (42.9%) cases simulated a neoplasm. Two cases were associated with elastofibromas in other locations. Differential diagnosis includes amyloidoma, elastofibrolipoma, mesenteric elastic vascular sclerosis in neuroendocrine tumors, diverticular disease elastosis, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, pulse granuloma, and digestive lesions in patients treated with D-Penicillamine.
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spelling pubmed-81127492021-06-01 Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases Val-Bernal, José-Fernando Mayorga, Marta María García-Gutierrez, Francisco Javier Rom J Morphol Embryol Original Paper Abdominal elastotic deposits are uncommon lesions that often presents as polyps. They show three histological patterns: fibroelastosis, angioelastosis, and elastofibroma. We describe 23 cases including rare locations, such as mesentery, greater omentum, hernia sac, spleen, peripancreatic fat, and hypodermal fat. The age of the patients ranged from 49 to 93 years (mean, 76.8 years). Most lesions were discovered incidentally in the microscopic study. The most frequent locations were peritoneal subserosa (43.5%) and mesentery/mesocolon/greater omentum (39.1%). The most common pattern was fibroelastosis (69.6%) followed by angioelastosis (26.1%). We observed one case of omental elastofibroma. A review of the 14 abdominal elastofibromas described including our case revealed that the age of the patients ranged from 45 to 88 years (mean, 68.5 years). Female predominance is striking (M:F, 1:12). The most common site was the stomach (50%). The greater omentum (14.3%), small intestine (7.1%), and pancreas (7.1%) are very rare sites for this lesion. Only one case before ours has been published in the greater omentum. The size of the lesions ranged from 0.7 cm to 8 cm (mean 3.2 cm). In 36.4% of the cases located in the digestive tract, the mucosa did not show alterations. Ulcerations (36.4%) or polypoid excrescences (18.2%) were mostly observed. Six (42.9%) cases were asymptomatic and six (42.9%) cases simulated a neoplasm. Two cases were associated with elastofibromas in other locations. Differential diagnosis includes amyloidoma, elastofibrolipoma, mesenteric elastic vascular sclerosis in neuroendocrine tumors, diverticular disease elastosis, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, pulse granuloma, and digestive lesions in patients treated with D-Penicillamine. Academy of Medical Sciences, Romanian Academy Publishing House, Bucharest 2020 2021-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8112749/ /pubmed/33817725 http://dx.doi.org/10.47162/RJME.61.3.22 Text en Copyright © 2020, Academy of Medical Sciences, Romanian Academy Publishing House, Bucharest https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License, which permits unrestricted use, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium, non-commercially, provided the new creations are licensed under identical terms as the original work and the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Val-Bernal, José-Fernando
Mayorga, Marta María
García-Gutierrez, Francisco Javier
Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
title Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
title_full Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
title_fullStr Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
title_full_unstemmed Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
title_short Abdominal elastotic lesions. A clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
title_sort abdominal elastotic lesions. a clinicopathologic study of 23 cases
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8112749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33817725
http://dx.doi.org/10.47162/RJME.61.3.22
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