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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (acute abdomen)
3,084 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors describe a rare case of spontaneous rupture of a renal liposarcoma which imitated the clinical picture of an acute abdomen. Urgent transabdominal left nephrectomy was performed. The entire lower half of the kidney was altered by the tumour and ruptured and there was an extensive perirenal and retroperitoneal haematoma. The histological finding confirmed the presence of a primary renal liposarcoma. This is the first case of spontaneous rupture of a liposarcoma of the kidneys described in our literature and the second case in the world literature. The patient survives now for eight years after operation and is in a good condition.
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PMID:[Spontaneous rupture of a renal liposarcoma]. 263 65

Two cases of spontaneous rupture of the kidney manifesting as acute abdomen are described. In both cases urgent transabdominal nephrectomy was carried out. The whole distal half of the kidney was tumorous and rupture, with extensive perirenal and retroperitoneal haemorrhage. Histological findings showed in the first instance renal liposarcoma, in the second instance an atypical lipoma of the kidney. The first patient survives 4 years, the second one year, after the operation both are in a good condition.
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PMID:Spontaneous rupture of the kidney. 377 19

Case-report of a 54 year-old patient who was admitted with the clinical picture of an acute abdomen on the basis of intraabdominal haemorrhage. X-ray investigation discounted the diagnosis of ruptured aortic aneurysm, the CAT scan showed a suspected acute haemorrhagic necrotising pancreatitis. At laparotomy, a fatty, bleeding kidney tumour was found growing into the retroperitoneal tissue. The histological frozen-section showed a leimyo liposarcoma of the kidney. Bourneville-Pringle's disease was only afterwards known to be the basic illness of the patient, as was verified at postmortem examination. From the knowledge of these new facts, both the CAT-scan and the intra-operative and histological findings could be correctly interpreted.
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PMID:[Massive retroperitoneal haemorrhage in the Bourneville-Pringle syndrome (author's transl)]. 710 20

Case report of a giant retroperitoneal liposarcoma which presented with a picture of acute abdomen resulting from a massive tumoral haemorrhage. Diagnosis was achieved by ECO and CT, and was confirmed by Pathological Anatomy. Treatment was surgical, performing tumour removal plus polar nephrectomy of the affected side. The patient evolution was favourable. The standard methods of diagnosis and prognostic factors are commented.
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PMID:[Intratumor and retroperitoneal massive hemorrhage caused by retroperitoneal liposarcoma]. 901 53

A 21-year-old man, who had been treated for congenital dilatation of the bile duct 13 years previously, presented with an acute abdomen. The physical examination suggested peritonitis, and an emergent laparotomy was performed. A perforation was foundin the jejunum approximately 100 cm distal to the ligament of Treitz, followed by resection of a 60-cm jejunal segment. No tumorous lesions were found during the operation, and the resected jejunal segment showed only focal myxomatous thickening of the serosa. Despite intensive therapy, he died of uncontrollable septic shock 2 days after the operation. Unexpectedly, however, histological examination revealed a liposarcoma, showing an unclassifiable histology. From the distribution of the lesion and the histological findings, it is thought that a primary lesion was somewhere else, covered by severe adhesions due to the previous operation, and that the tumor cells spreading from it could have caused the jejunal perforation through vascular involvement. Although extremely rare, liposarcomas in the abdomen can cause intestinal perforation. It is important for both clinicians andpathologists to carefully investigate the cause of an unusual clinical presentation such as intestinal perforation.
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PMID:A case of liposarcoma with peritonitis due to jejunal perforation. 1852 66

A 49-year-old woman presented with acute abdominal pain in the right iliac fossa in our emergency department. Pain was abrupt in onset and severely colicky in nature. Abnormal laboratory values included a C-reactive protein of 75 mg/L and a CA-125 of 70.3 U/mL. White blood cell count was normal. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan revealed an inhomogeneous mass of 9.5 x 3.5 x 5.5 cm in diameter close to the appendix vermiformis and the sigmoid colon. Because of the clinical symptoms of an acute abdomen an explorative laparotomy was performed. Intraoperatively a pedunculated tumor beginning at the serosa of the sigmoid colon was found. The appendix was unremarkable. The macroscopic aspect as well as the backtable incision of the tumor was suspicious of an intraperitoneal liposarcoma. Rapid section and histopathologic examination revealed necrotic fat tissue without any malignancy. The patient was discharged from the hospital 7 days after the operation with normal laboratory parameters and without further complication. When epiploic appendagitis is evident as a big tumor mass in addition to clinical symptoms of an acute abdomen and elevated tumor markers, surgical exploration is mandatory.
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PMID:Torquated giant appendix epiploica mimicking intraperitoneal liposarcoma: report of a case. 2202 1

Intraabdominal fat is a metabolically active tissue that may undergo necrosis through a number of mechanisms. Fat necrosis is a common finding at abdominal cross-sectional imaging, and it may cause abdominal pain, mimic findings of acute abdomen, or be asymptomatic and accompany other pathophysiologic processes. Common processes that are present in fat necrosis include torsion of an epiploic appendage, infarction of the greater omentum, and fat necrosis related to trauma or pancreatitis. In addition, other pathologic processes that involve fat may be visualized at computed tomography, including focal lipohypertrophy, pathologic fat paucity (lipodystrophies), and malignancies such as liposarcoma, which may mimic benign causes of fat stranding. Because fat necrosis and malignant processes such as liposarcoma and peritoneal carcinomatosis may mimic one another, knowledge of a patient's clinical history and prior imaging studies is essential for accurate diagnosis.
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PMID:Imaging manifestations of abdominal fat necrosis and its mimics. 2208 85