| Literature DB >> 32914079 |
Yuta Sano1, Motohiro Fujiwara1, Takeshi Yuasa1, Yoshinobu Komai1, Tatsuya Yamamoto2, Atsushi Kohno2, Masayuki Nakao3, Kentaro Inamura4, Junji Yonese1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Testicular germ cell cancer has a relatively good prognosis even if visceral and/or lymph node metastases are present thanks to chemotherapy. Yet chemotherapy can lead to various adverse events. Therefore, it is crucial to distinguish whether a suspected metastatic disease is metastasis or not. CASEEntities:
Keywords: mediastinal lymph node; sarcoidosis; sarcoid‐like reaction; seminoma; testicular germ cell cancer
Year: 2020 PMID: 32914079 PMCID: PMC7469829 DOI: 10.1002/iju5.12191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IJU Case Rep ISSN: 2577-171X
Fig. 1Imaging findings of a lung nodule with mediastinal lymphadenopathy of a patient with testicular seminoma after right orchiectomy. Progressing lung nodule at (a) 3, (b) 6, and (c) 9 months after orchiectomy. Development of mediastinal lymphadenopathy at (d) 3, (e) 6, and (f) 9 months after orchiectomy. PET/CT fusion images revealed accumulation of 18F‐labeled fluorodeoxyglucose in the lung nodule and mediastinal lymph nodes.
Fig. 2Representative histology of primary seminoma, lung nodule, and mediastinal lymph nodes. The primary lesion was diagnosed as seminoma (a: objective 40×). The lung nodule (b: objective 4×, c: objective 20×) and a mediastinal lymph node (d: objective 2×, e: objective 40×) were surgically removed and diagnosed as epithelioid cell granuloma without caseous necrosis. Small lesions of epithelioid cell granuloma without caseous necrosis were scattered around the lung nodule (e: objective 4×, f: objective 40×).