Cases reported "Ovarian Neoplasms"

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1/115. Primary endometrioid carcinoma of fallopian tube. Clinicomorphologic study.

    Twenty cases of primary Fallopian tube endometrioid carcinoma (PFTEC) are presented in the paper. This accounts for 42.5% of all histologic forms of primary Fallopian tube carcinoma (PFTC) found in our Department. The youngest patient was 38, and the oldest 68 years (mean: 56 years). Seven patients were nulliparas. Only two cases were bilateral. According to FIGO staging, 13 cases were evaluated as stage I, 4 as II, and 3 as stage III. Due to the histologic grading, 8 tumors were classified as well, 7 as moderately, and 5 as poorly differentiated. In the time of preparation of the manuscript, 12 women were still alive, 2 of them with recurrent disease. The follow-up of patients without recurrence ranged from 4 to 120 months (median: 63). Eight patients had died (survival time: from 4 to 65 months; median: 26). Metastases were found in 8 patients, especially to ovaries. In 14/20 cases of PFTEC various forms of tubal wall invasion were observed. blood or lymphatic vessels involvement was found in 9 patients. Six of them had died and one is alive with the symptoms of disease. Immunohistochemical detection of the mutant form of p53 protein and oncogene product, c-erbB-2, was studied in 17 cases. Nine patients exhibited simultaneous p53 protein accumulation and c-erbB-2 expression. 2/9 of these patients are alive with recurrent tumors and 4/9 died. Endometrioid carcinoma of the Fallopian tube can be characterized by a tendency to superficial invasion of tubal wall and in a half of the cases by invasion of vessels. The majority of these tumors were diagnosed at an early stage tumors.
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keywords = fallopian tube, tube
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2/115. A case of fallopian tube carcinoma: successful preoperative diagnosis with MR imaging.

    We report a case of fallopian tube carcinoma, successfully diagnosed preoperatively. The patient was a 64-year-old woman. Transvaginal sonography and computed tomography showed a cystic and solid tumor on the left side of the uterus, suggesting ovarian cancer. The tumor was, however, suspected to be a fallopian tube carcinoma on MR imaging. MR images showed a solid mass surrounded by a tube-shaped cystic part. At surgery, a solid and cystic tumor was found in the left fallopian tube. MR imaging may be useful to assist in the diagnosis of fallopian tube carcinoma.
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ranking = 1.9941749089647
keywords = fallopian tube, tube
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3/115. Primary carcinoma of the fallopian tube coexisting with benign cystic teratoma of the ovary.

    Primary carcinoma of the fallopian tube is a rare malignancy of the female genital tract and infrequently diagnosed before an operation. The majority of patients have extensive disease at the time of diagnosis. We have experienced incidentally a case of a carcinoma of the fallopian tube coexisting with a benign cystic teratoma of the ovary in a 25-year-old woman. We report this case with a brief review of literatures.
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ranking = 1.4947574180682
keywords = fallopian tube, tube
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4/115. Tuberculous peritonitis: part of the differential diagnosis in ovarian cancer.

    We report a case of tuberculous peritonitis in a young woman who was initially thought to have ovarian cancer. We emphasize the misleading raised CA 125 levels and radiologic pictures and the importance of frozen-section analysis for definitive diagnosis to avoid unnecessary surgery.
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ranking = 0.0011650182070676
keywords = tube
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5/115. Clear cell carcinoma of the fimbria of the fallopian tube in a BRCA1 carrier undergoing prophylactic surgery.

    We report the case history of a patient with a family history of breast and ovarian cancer who was subsequently found to be a carrier of the BRCA1 gene, in whom a tiny focus of clear cell carcinoma was found at the fimbrial end of one fallopian tube when she underwent prophylactic hysterectomy and bilateral salpingoophorectomy. The implications of this finding are discussed.
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ranking = 1.2456311817235
keywords = fallopian tube, tube
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6/115. Malignant ovarian sex cord tumor with annular tubules in a patient with peutz-jeghers syndrome: a case report.

    The majority of ovarian sex cord tumors with annular tubules (SCTAT) are benign neoplasms that arise sporadically. In patients who have peutz-jeghers syndrome (PJS), ovarian SCTAT is often an incidental finding. Malignant behavior in SCTAT has heretofore been reported only in sporadic cases. We report a case of bilateral, malignant SCTAT developing in a 47-year-old woman who had PJS, originally diagnosed as adenocarcinoma on cervicovaginal cytology. Cervicovaginal and peritoneal fluid cytologic preparations were characterized by pseudopapillary clusters and three-dimensional tubes of tumor cells with scanty cytoplasm and high nuclear: cytoplasmic ratio. Examination of surgical resection specimens revealed bilateral, solid ovarian tumors composed of simple and complex annular tubules with hyaline cores, typical of SCTAT. Tumor emboli were present within salpingeal lymphovascular spaces and in both right and left pelvic lymph nodes. flow cytometry of tumor cells demonstrated a diploid phenotype. This case represents the first documented example of bilateral, malignant SCTAT arising in a patient who had PJS, presenting with an atypical cervicovaginal smear.
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ranking = 0.0011650182070676
keywords = tube
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7/115. Endometrial intraepithelial carcinoma with associated peritoneal carcinomatosis.

    Endometrial intraepithelial carcinoma (EIC) is a recently described entity, defined as a noninvasive, cytologically malignant lesion that replaces the endometrial surface epithelium. EIC frequently coexists with uterine serous carcinoma (USC) and is hypothesized to be its precursor lesion. However, the clinical significance and biologic potential of finding EIC without USC is not known. We report three postmenopausal women with EIC alone who were found to have multiple, synchronous foci of extrauterine serous carcinoma at presentation. Because the clinical findings in these patients simulated primary peritoneal serous carcinoma (PSC), we compared the clinicopathologic features of these cases with a group of nine bona fide PSCs for which exhaustively sectioned endometria, fallopian tubes, and ovaries were available for review. The average age of the EIC patients was 73 years. Two patients presented with abdominal distention and one with vaginal bleeding. hysterectomy in each case showed endometrial polyps with EIC, but without invasive USC, in a background of atrophic endometrium. Bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and staging showed serous carcinoma involving the ovarian hilum, the surfaces of the fallopian tubes and ovaries, in addition to peritoneal carcinomatosis. p53 overexpression was observed in both EIC and the extrauterine deposits of serous carcinoma in each case. The average age of the PSC patients was 66 years. All nine patients presented with abdominal distention. EIC was not identified in any of the hysterectomy specimens. Bilateral salpingo-oophorectomies, omentectomies, and peritoneal biopsies showed peritoneal carcinomatosis, including bulky peritoneal tumor deposits, but only minimal ovarian surface involvement. p53 overexpression was observed in seven cases. These findings indicate that EIC without coincident USC can be associated with invasive, extrauterine serous carcinomatosis. We did not, however, find any significant differences between the clinicopathologic features of primary extrauterine serous carcinomas (PSCs) and those associated with EIC. We conclude that the finding of EIC in an endometrial curettage specimen should prompt a thorough search for an invasive uterine and/or extrauterine serous carcinoma. Conversely, an endometrial origin should be excluded in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis.
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ranking = 0.4982524726894
keywords = fallopian tube, tube
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8/115. A patient presenting with a pelvic mass, elevated CA-125, and fever.

    BACKGROUND: Tuberculous peritonitis is a rare event which can mimic advanced stage ovarian cancer. A pelvic mass and an elevated CA-125 is suggestive of an ovarian malignancy; however, benign conditions may be discovered, especially in the premenopausal patient. CASE: A patient with a pelvic mass, ascites, and an elevated CA-125 underwent an exploratory laparotomy for presumed ovarian cancer. Final pathology revealed pelvic tuberculosis without any pulmonary involvement. Acid-fast bacilli were confirmed with polymerase chain reaction in the surgical specimen. DISCUSSION: Pelvic tuberculosis is an uncommon gynecologic condition that presents with ascites, a pelvic mass, and fever. An elevated CA-125 is not specific for ovarian malignancy.
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ranking = 0.0023300364141353
keywords = tube
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9/115. The great imitator: miliary peritoneal tuberculosis mimicking stage III ovarian carcinoma.

    PURPOSE: To report a case of peritoneal tuberculosis initially mistaken at the time of surgery for metastatic ovarian carcinoma. CASE REPORT: A 31-year-old Filipino female was found to have increasing abdominal pain, ascites, early satiety, increasing abdominal girth and bilateral complex masses. Diagnostic laparoscopy revealed the presence of > 4 liters of ascites, a frozen pelvis secondary to what appeared to be bilateral ovarian carcinomas, along with miliary seeding of the entire anterior abdominal wall, omentum, small bowel and small bowel mesentery, right and left diaphragmatic surfaces, and hepatic surface. Frozen section, at the time of laparotomy, revealed necrotizing granulomas most consistent with disseminated tuberculosis that was confirmed at the time of final pathologic review and culture. CONCLUSION: Peritoneal tuberculosis can be mistaken for widely metastatic ovarian carcinoma at time of surgery.
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ranking = 0.0081551274494735
keywords = tube
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10/115. Laparoscopic cystectomy of a twisted, benign, ovarian teratoma in the first trimester of pregnancy.

    Adnexal torsion is an unusual, but serious complication in pregnancy. The treatment is surgical, but this may increase the risk of pregnancy loss in the first trimester. The use of laparoscopic surgery, which is less invasive than traditional laparotomy, has been limited by diagnostic and technical difficulties including determination of ovarian tumor nature and spillage of cyst contents intraoperatively. A 25-year-old woman in her 11th week of pregnancy had acute severe left lower-abdominal pain, which was diagnosed as left ovarian teratoma with torsion. She underwent emergency laparoscopic surgery with unwinding of the twisted fallopian tube and ovary and cystectomy of the teratoma. The patient subsequently delivered a full-term baby, without complications. Accurate ultrasound and cytologic diagnoses along with copious intraoperative warm, normal saline irrigation were likely contributing factors to the successful outcome of this case.
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ranking = 0.2491262363447
keywords = fallopian tube, tube
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