| Literature DB >> 35813004 |
Mouna Kouira1, Imen Bannour1, Mohammed Raouf Ben Abdesslem1, Nihed Abdessayed2, Badra Bannour1.
Abstract
Introduction: Sister Mary Joseph's nodule (SMJN) is a rare illness characterized by an umbilical mass caused by tumor metastases in the abdomen or pelvis. The most common main site of SMJN in women is ovarian cancer. Case Presentation. A 73-year-old woman with no pathological history came to our emergency room with a one-month history of umbilicus enlargement. A 9-centimeter uncomfortable umbilical swelling with hard consistency was discovered during a clinical examination. An ovarian tumor with several local expansions was seen on an abdominal CT scan. It was linked to peritoneal metastases, one of which extends via a supraumbilical hernial orifice and into intestinal tissues in the same hernia sac. The umbilical tumor was removed from the patient. A moderately differentiated serous carcinoma with ovarian origin was identified in a periumbilical site on histological testing.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35813004 PMCID: PMC9259374 DOI: 10.1155/2022/5131705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 1A 9-centimeter inflammatory and painful umbilical tumor with a hard consistency.
Figure 2An ovarian tumor with intraperitoneal metastases, one of which extends through a hernial supraumbilical orifice, is shown on a CT scan of the abdominal cavity and pelvis.
Figure 3The umbilical nodule's microscopic features reveal a carcinomatous growth of glands and papillae lined by cuboidal cells with severe nuclear atypia (HEX 100).