| Literature DB >> 30197823 |
Chris Hutchinson1, Jonathan Lyske1, Vimal Patel1, Gavin Low1.
Abstract
Pelvic pain presents a common diagnostic conundrum with a myriad of causes ranging from benign and trivial to malignant and emergent. We present a case where a mucinous neoplasm of the appendix acted as a mimic for tubular adnexal pathology on imaging. With the associated imaging findings on ultrasound, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging, we wish to raise awareness of mucinous tumors of the appendix when tubular right adnexal pathology is present both in the presence of pelvic or abdominal pain or when noted incidentally. Tubular pathology such as uncomplicated paraovarian cysts or hydrosalpinx is frequently treated conservatively with long-interval follow-up imaging or left to clinical follow-up. Thus, if incorrectly diagnosed as tubular pathology, an appendix mucocele or mucinous neoplasm of the appendix is likely to be undertreated. We wish to clarify some of the confusion around nomenclature and classification of the multiple entities that are comprised by the terms mucocele and mucinous tumor of the appendix.Entities:
Keywords: Adnexal; appendix neoplasm; mucocele; tubular
Year: 2018 PMID: 30197823 PMCID: PMC6118110 DOI: 10.4103/jcis.JCIS_27_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Imaging Sci ISSN: 2156-5597
Figure 1A 47-year-old lady presenting with pelvic pain and secondary amenorrhea. Transabdominal ultrasound of showing a dilated fluid-filled right adnexal lesion (arrows).
Figure 2A 47-year-old lady presenting with pelvic pain and secondary amenorrhea. Transvaginal ultrasound showing the thin-walled tubular structure (arrows) with adjacent pocket of free fluid (arrowheads).
Figure 3A 47-year-old lady presenting with pelvic pain and secondary amenorrhea. (a and b) Axial and sagittal T2 turbo spin echo showing a vertically oriented tubular fluid-filled structured with thin wall, pointing toward the right lower quadrant (arrowheads). (c and d) Axial T1 fat sat and axial T1 show the structure to be low in T1-weighted signal (arrowheads).
Figure 4A 47-year-old lady presenting with pelvic pain and secondary amenorrhea. Coronal reformats from portal venous phase computed tomography abdomen and pelvis demonstrating the distended, mucous-filled appendix with thin walls and coarse wall calcification (arrowheads).