| Literature DB >> 26528382 |
Changhu Liang1, Shifeng Xu2, Bin Zhao1, Guoyuan Ma3, Yinglin Du4.
Abstract
The radiologic features of intralobar pulmonary sequestration (ILPS) have been describe and include the identification of a feeding systemic artery with venous drainage through pulmonary veins. Primary sequestration associated with typical hamartoma signs is really rare and has been described only once. We describe a patient with ILPS whose radiographic findings were unusual for two reasons. First, computed tomography (CT) demonstrated a bulky mass in the pulmonary sequestration. The size of lesion and histopathology made it an unusual presentation. Final histology study demonstrated pulmonary hamartoma with predominantly adipose and cartilage differentiation, which is an unusual complication originated from ILPS. Another sign also explains the second unusual feature, intracranial cholesteatoma, occurring concurrently with ILPS.Entities:
Keywords: Hamartoma; Pulmonary Sequestration; Syndrome
Year: 2015 PMID: 26528382 PMCID: PMC4623778 DOI: 10.5812/iranjradiol.11591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Radiol ISSN: 1735-1065 Impact factor: 0.212
Figure 1.Preoperative computed tomographic angiography in a 39-year-old woman. Mean intensity projection (A,B) and volume rendering (C) images demonstrate a circuitous systemic artery (black arrow) arising from the abdominal aortic with venous drainage into the left atrium through widened, tortuous pulmonary vein (white arrow).
Figure 2.A, intraoperative view of the giant lesion and the hypervascular surface. B, the internal components of the lesion. C, gross specimen photograph of the lesion: right lower lobe (white arrow) and lesion (thick arrow) with the draining vein (black arrow). D, pathology (200 μm): predominant fatty differentiation, with intermixed chondroid and osseous areas.