| Literature DB >> 20030817 |
Christos Asteriou1, Dimitrios Konstantinou, Miltiadis Lalountas, Athanassios Kleontas, Konstantinos Setzis, Georgios Zafiriou, Nikolaos Barbetakis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leiomyomas of esophagus, although rare, are the most frequent benign tumors of esophagus. Aim of this study is the presentation of 7 patients with esophageal leiomyomas who underwent surgical treatment during a 9-year period.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20030817 PMCID: PMC2804581 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-7-102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Clinical presentation, diagnostic examinations' results and surgical approach.
| Sex | Age | Symptoms | EGS-EUS | Diameter | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ♂ | 67 | Dysphagia | Submucosal hypoechoic tumor at 22-28 cm | 5,9 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
| ♂ | 48 | Epigastric discomfort | Submucosal hypoechoic nodule at 29-32 cm | 2 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
| ♂ | 51 | Epigastric pain, Dysphagia | Submucosal hypoechoic tumor at 23-28 cm | 4,8 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
| ♂ | 59 | Epigastric discomfort | Submucosal hypoechoic nodule at 22-26 cm | 2,7 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
| ♂ | 57 | Dysphagia | Submucosal hypoechoic tumor at 27-33 cm | 5,2 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
| ♀ | 61 | Retrosternal burning, Dysphagia | Submucosal hypoechoic tumor at 20-27 cm | 6,5 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
| ♀ | 55 | Epigastric discomfort | Submucosal hypoechoic nodule at 29-34 cm | 3,1 cm | Right Thoracotomy-Enucleation |
EGS: Esophagogastroscopy, EUS: Endoscopic Ultrasonography
Figure 1Endoscopic view of an esophageal leiomyoma located at the median third. A submucosal lesion compressing the lumen of esophagus, which however is leaving intact the overlying mucosa, is demonstrated.
Figure 2Endoscopic ultrasonographic evaluation of a leiomyoma. The tumor is presented as a well-demarkated, homogeneous and hypoechoic lesion with clear margin, originating from muscularis mucosa. In this case, its size is 2.7 × 1.7 cm. A small lymph node (1.07 cm) is also discovered (red arrows).
Figure 3Computed Tomography of the chest revealing a large mass originating from median esophagus (red arrows).
Figure 4Histopathological view of leiomyoma (H-EX100). The tumor is composed of clusters and bundles of elongated cells with ovoid nuclei and varying amounts of eosinophilic fibrillar cytoplasm.