| Literature DB >> 30760330 |
Evangelos N Symeonidis1, Chrysovalantis Gkekas2, Ioannis Tsifountoudis3, Asterios Symeonidis2, Christos Georgiadis2, Vasileios Kalyvas2, Apostolos Malioris2, Michail Papathanasiou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Zinner syndrome represents a rare congenital malformation of the urinary tract. It comprises a constellation of Wolffian duct anomalies and is almost exclusively encountered as a classic triad of seminal vesicle cysts, ejaculatory duct obstruction and renal agenesis. Patients can be either asymptomatic or symptomatic. Recently, minimally invasive surgical techniques have emerged, superseding traditional surgery for select symptomatic cases. Our case highlights the finding of a rare clinical syndrome that was incidentally detected during a routine mass screening of military recruits in the Greek Armed Forces. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Greek; Military recruit; Renal agenesis; Seminal vesicle cyst; Youth; Zinner syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30760330 PMCID: PMC6375168 DOI: 10.1186/s40779-019-0194-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mil Med Res ISSN: 2054-9369
Fig. 1Contrast-enhanced axial (a) and coronal reconstruction (b) CT images of the abdomen reveal only a right kidney with absence of a left kidney
Fig. 2Axial CT image of the pelvis (a) depicts a large lobulated multicystic lesion of left seminal vesicle; the cystic lesion does not show enhancement on contrast-enhanced axial CT image (b) (arrows)
Fig. 3Contrast-enhanced coronal reconstruction CT images of the abdomen and pelvis depict a saccular dilated ectopic ureter opening into the left cystic seminal vesicle (a) and extending centrally up to the level of L3 vertebral body (b) (arrows)
Fig. 4Coronal MR images demonstrate a large lobulated multicystic lesion in the anatomic region of left seminal vesicle with low signal intensity on T2-weighted FS images (a) and high signal on T1-weighted images (b), corresponding to a dilated SVC (white arrows). The multilobulated SVC is also depicted on axial T2-weighted FS (c) and T1-weighted FS (d) images with low signal and high signal intensity, respectively, suggesting proteinaceous or hematic content (white arrows). The normal right seminal vesicle is shown on coronal T2-weighted FS (a) and T1-weighted (b) images with high and intermediate signal intensity, respectively, corresponding to fluid (black arrows)
Fig. 5Sagittal T2-weighted MR images of the pelvis demonstrate enlargement of left ejaculatory duct communicating with the dilated SVC (arrows)
Fig. 6Coronal T1-weighted (a) and corresponding T1-weighted FS image after intravenous administration of contrast medium (b) depict a saccular dilated ectopic left ureter opening into the multilobulated SVC. The ectopic ureter is also observed extending centrally with a tortuous morphology on adjacent T1-weighted FS images after intravenous administration of contrast medium (c and d). High signal intensity in the ureter indicative of proteinaceous or hematic content is present on all MR images (arrows)