| Literature DB >> 26035028 |
Soumya Patnaik1, Alvin Htut2, Peter Wang3, Daniel Eisenberg3, Ronald Miick4, Eyob Feyssa4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most abdominal cysts, including adrenal pseudocysts, are benign and asymptomatic. Rapid enlargement, hemorrhage, infection, rupture with leakage of cyst contents, or pressure on adjacent organs can cause symptoms. Although usually diagnosed incidentally on imaging, determining the origin of a cyst can sometimes be challenging. In these situations, surgical excision and pathological analysis is crucial to diagnosis and management. We report here a case of a giant symptomatic adrenal pseudocyst that closely mimicked a hepatic cyst at presentation. CASE REPORT: A 50-year-old man, with a history of an incidentally detected hepatic cyst, presented with severe abdominal pain, fevers, leukocytosis, and mildly abnormal liver function tests. CT scan revealed a large well defined cystic space-occupying lesion within the liver, with findings suggesting cyst rupture and possible infection. Early laparotomy was performed, and the origin was determined intraoperatively to be right adrenal, which was later confirmed by pathology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26035028 PMCID: PMC4463998 DOI: 10.12659/AJCR.893798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Case Rep ISSN: 1941-5923
Figure 1.A large cystic mass seen in the RUQ on a prior CT abdomen: coronal view of the cyst exerting mass effect on the liver and inferiorly displacing the right kidney.
Figure 2.CT abdomen 3 months prior to presentation: giant 21×18×15 cm, Rimmed, calcified cyst in the right hemi-abdomen.
Figure 3.(A, B) CT abdomen obtained this admission in axial and sagittal views showing cystic mass in RUQ.
Figure 4.(A, B) Axial and coronal views. Fluid and stranding in the pararenal and retrocolic space inferior to the cyst are apparent.
Figure 5.Cyst wall with heavy mural calcifications.
Figure 6.Cyst wall contiguous with adrenal tissue (2×).
Figure 7.Pseudocyst wall on 40× magnification. No epithelial lining is present.