| Literature DB >> 33802800 |
Gina Nam1, Sa Ra Lee2, Hye Rim Eum2, Sung Hoon Kim2, Hee Dong Chae2, Gwang Jun Kim1.
Abstract
Epidermoid cysts are small, solitary, and slow-growing lesions that rarely appear in the perineum and mostly arise because of trauma. This study examined a huge perineal epidermoid cyst that slowly grew over eight years in a premenopausal woman. Ultrasonography showed that the hemorrhage in the cyst was a semisolid hypoechoic mass, which mimicked endometrioma, and was tentatively diagnosed as scar endometriosis in the perineum after vaginal delivery. This case study highlights the importance of wide surgical excision and histopathologic diagnosis, even with typical ultrasonography and surgical findings.Entities:
Keywords: endometriosis; epidermoid cyst; perineum; semisolid; ultrasonography
Year: 2021 PMID: 33802800 PMCID: PMC8002583 DOI: 10.3390/medicina57030276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1An 8 cm × 8 cm × 6 cm soft, mid-perineal mass without tenderness.
Figure 2Trans-labial sonography showing a homogeneous hypoechoic semisolid cyst (asterisk) with a “ground-glass” appearance with no flow on the color Doppler imaging.
Figure 3Magnetic resonance image showing a well-defined perineal mass (asterisk) with (A) intermediate signal intensity on the T1-weighted image and (B) intermediate signal intensity on the T2-weighted image.
Figure 4Wide excision showing a thick, chocolate-colored fluid with pale yellow, fat debris.
Figure 5Histopathological findings through hematoxylin-eosin staining showing a cyst wall lined by stratified squamous epithelium (arrow) with a distinct granular cell layer and laminated keratin along the luminal surface (asterisk). (A) Original magnification, ×40. (B) Original magnification, ×200.
Figure 6The healed surgical site of the perineum, as observed during the one-month follow-up visit.