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Case Study
Abdominal Fibromatosis in a Young Child: A Case Study and Review of the Literature
Hyun Hee Chu, Pyoung Han Hwang, Yeon Jun Jeong, Myoung Ja Chung
Korean J Pathol. 2013;47(5):472-476.   Published online October 25, 2013
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4132/KoreanJPathol.2013.47.5.472
  • 7,280 View
  • 38 Download
  • 3 Crossref
AbstractAbstract PDF

Fibromatoses comprise many different entities of well-differentiated fibroblastic proliferation with variable collagen production and form a firm nodular mass. Abdominal fibromatosis is distinguishable from other forms of fibromatosis because of its location and its tendency to occur in women of childbearing age during or following pregnancy. Abdominal fibromatosis in children is an extremely rare condition. A 15-month-old boy presented with an abdominal wall mass that had recently increased in size. Mass excision was perfomed. The tumor was 4.3×4.1 cm and partly circumscribed. Histologically, the tumor was composed of parallel long fascicles of spindle-cells with a uniform appearance. The edges of the resected mass were infiltrative, and the surgical margins were positive. Mitotic figures were <1/10 high power fields. No cellular atypia or necrosis was present. The tumor cells were positive for vimentin and nuclear β-catenin staining.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • A rare tumor of the large bowel in a young boy
    Shyam Srinivasan, Soumitra Saha
    Cancer Research, Statistics, and Treatment.2021; 4(4): 752.     CrossRef
  • Uncommon abdominal wall mass in a young boy: Desmoid tumor
    Levent Cankorkmaz, Mehmet H. Atalar, H. Reyhan Eğilmez
    Cumhuriyet Medical Journal.2018; : 811.     CrossRef
  • Lesiones ocupantes de espacio en pared abdominal (no herniaria). La visión del patólogo
    Isidro Machado, Julia Cruz, Javier Lavernia, Fernando Carbonell
    Revista Hispanoamericana de Hernia.2015; 3(3): 85.     CrossRef
Case Report
Abdominal Endometriosis Diagnosed by Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology: A Report of Two Cases.
Myoung Ja Chung, Yeon Jun Jeong, Ho Myong Hwang, Kyu Yoon Jang, Woo Sung Moon, Myoung Jae Kang, Dong Geun Lee
Korean J Cytopathol. 2004;15(1):70-73.
  • 1,543 View
  • 16 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
The incidence of endometriosis in post-operative abdominal scars is rare. We describe two cases of abdominal endometriosis diagnosed by fine needle aspiration (FNA). Both patients presented with subcutaneous masses at previous cesarean section scars with cyclic symptoms of pain. The cytologic smears were cellular and comprised two distinct cell populations consisting of epithelial and stromal components. An epithelial component consisted of flat sheets of polygonal cells and the second stromal component showed crowded clusters of spindle cells or isolated single cells. Hemosiderin-laden macrophages were found in the background. FNA offers a safe and effective tool for diagnosis of abdominal wall endometriosis.

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