| Literature DB >> 24884743 |
Yasumichi Yagi1, Yasuhiro Shoji, Shozo Sasaki, Akemi Yoshikawa, Yuji Tsukioka, Wataru Fukushima, Hisashi Hirosawa, Ryohei Izumi, Katsuhiko Saito.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Colon cancer can arise from the mucosa in a colonic diverticulum. Although colon diverticulum is a common disease, few cases have been previously reported on colon cancer associated with a diverticulum. We report a rare case of sigmoid colon cancer arising in a diverticulum with involvement of the urinary bladder, which presented characteristic radiographic images. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24884743 PMCID: PMC4030041 DOI: 10.1186/1471-230X-14-90
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Figure 1Enhanced MRI T1-weighted image. Between the sigmoid colon and the urinary bladder, the solid tumor was connected via the fistula, showing a dumbbell-shaped appearance. The sigmoid colon tumor protruded into the urinary bladder lumen (arrows) via the colovescal fistula (arrowheads).
Figure 2Barium enema findings. The colon tumor was detected as a defect in the sigmoid colon (arrow). Around the sigmoid colon cancer, there were multiple colon diverticula in the sigmoid colon.
Figure 3Cross section of the resected specimen. A: Macroscopic picture of a cross section. B: Diagram of a cross section. The progression of the sigmoid colon cancer was reflected in the MRI findings. The macroscopic findings revealed the progression via the colovesical fistula. SC: sigmoid colon cancer. UBT: urinary bladder tumor.
Figure 4Microscopic findings of the resected specimen (H-E staining, ×200). A: The sigmoid colon cancer, penetrating to the urinary bladder, did not invade the surrounding muscular layer as the tumor progressed. Adjacent to the sigmoid tumor, the normal colon mucosa was depressed sharply (arrows) with a thin-walled muscular layer (arrowhead), indicating that the colon cancer had arisen from a colon diverticulum. B: The sigmoid and urinary sides of the tumor were connected via the colovesical fistula. In the fistula, the cancerous tissue was completely covered with fibrous tissue, indicative of no exposure to the intraperitoneal space to cancerous tissue.