| Literature DB >> 31228079 |
Evangelos Voudoukis1, Afroditi Mpitouli2, Konstantina Giannakopoulou3, Magdalini Velegraki2, Galateia Datseri4, Maria Bachlitzanaki5, Georgios Kazamias6, Anthi Fahouridi7, Emmanouil Mastorakis6, Emmanouil Vardas2, Emmanouil Kontopodis5, Gregorios Paspatis2.
Abstract
There is a wide variety of pancreatic neoplasms identified, but the great majority of them are of primary origin. Metastatic disease in the pancreatic parenchyma is quite rare (2-5% of pancreatic malignancies) and most often is quite difficult to differentiate from other primary lesions. Most of the imaging studies fail to give certain discriminating features for metastatic pancreatic neoplasms, contrary to endoscopic ultrasound and tissue sampling, which can provide an accurate diagnosis. In this report, we present a case of a male middle aged man who was admitted to our hospital with painless jaundice and finally was diagnosed with a cutaneous scalp melanoma dispersedly metastasized to the pancreas and upper gastrointestinal tract (stomach and duodenum).Entities:
Keywords: Endoscopic ultrasound; Endoscopic ultrasound fine-needle biopsy; Pancreatic metastatic melanoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31228079 DOI: 10.1007/s12328-019-01004-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1865-7265