| Literature DB >> 28449573 |
Sun Hwa Kim1, Tae Wook Kang2, Kyunghee Lim1, Hyun Sung Joh1, Jiseok Kang1, Dong Hyun Sinn1.
Abstract
A 31-year-old male visited a local hospital due to sudden-onset severe abdominal pain. Abdominal computed tomography revealed a solid cystic mass with a size of approximately 12 cm and exhibiting both hemorrhage and fluid collection in the pelvic cavity. Emergency angiography and embolization were performed, and a large hepatic tumor was subsequently surgically resected. The tumor cells stained positive for human melanoma black-45 and smooth-muscle actin, and the pathologic diagnosis was hepatic angiomyolipoma. This case report also discusses the spontaneous rupture of a hepatic angiomyolipoma.Entities:
Keywords: Angiomyolipoma; Human melanoma black-45; Liver; Spontaneous rupture
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28449573 PMCID: PMC5497672 DOI: 10.3350/cmh.2016.0027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Mol Hepatol ISSN: 2287-2728
Figure 1.(A) On arterial phase computed tomography (CT) images, a 12 cm sized mass is noted in the right hepatic lobe. The mass shows a thin peripheral enhancing solid portion (white arrow) with an internal cystic component. (B) On non-enhanced CT scan images, there is a high density (white asterisk) along the perihepatic space representing peritoneal hemorrhage by tumor bleeding.
Figure 2.(A, B) On T1 and T2 weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images, the mass has multiloculated cystic lesions with fluid-fluid levels representing internal hemorrhage (white asterisk). (C) On out-of-phase MR images, there is no fat component within the mass (white arrow). (D) On diffusion weighted images with b-value 800, the corresponding peripheral enhancing component shows high signal intensity indicating diffusion restriction (white arrow)
Figure 3.(A) On a cut section, there is a huge multilocular cystic mass (white arrow) measuring 12.5×11×9.9 cm, which is located at S5 and S6. (B) Spindle or epithelioid smooth muscle cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and blood vessels (arrow) were seen on pathological findings (HE, ×200). But adipose tissue was rarely seen in this tumor. (C) Result of immunohistochemical staining , HMB-45 (HE, ×200).
Cases of hepatic AML presenting as a rupture
| Sex | Age | Tumor size (cm) | Symptom | Treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huber et al. [ | F | 22 | 8 | Hemorrhagic shock | Emergent resection |
| Guidi et al. [ | M | 74 | 10 | Upper abdominal pain | Emergent resection |
| Tsui et al. [ | M | 56 | 6.5 | N/A | Emergent resection |
| Zhou et al. [ | N/A | N/A | 5 | Hemorrhagic shock | Emergent laparotomy for hemostasis |
| Occhionorelli et al. [ | F | 25 | 9 | Upper abdominal pain | Elective resection after emergent laparotomy for hemostasis |
| Tajima et al. [ | M | 38 | 10.5 | Upper abdominal pain | Elective resection after transcatheter arterial embolization |
| Kai et al. [ | F | 77 | 2.5 | Hemorrhagic shock | Elective resection after transcatheter arterial embolization |
| This case | M | 31 | 12.5 | Upper abdominal pain | Elective resection after transcatheter arterial embolization |
AML, angiomyolipoma; N/A, not applicable.