Malignant melanoma development in gastrointestinal (GI) tract may be primary or secondary. Although small bowel, colon and stomach represent common GI sites affected from metastatic cutaneous malignant melanoma (cMM), more than 90% of the cases are identified only during autoptic examinations. Therefore, the diagnosis in a living patient of gallbladder metastasis from cMM is considered extremely rare. We aimed to describe a case of metastatic melanoma involving the gallbladder, the stomach and the small bowel in a 78-year-old male with diffuse abdominal pain and a history of cMM of the back, which was radically resected 4 years before. Abdominal ultrasound showed intracholecystic multiple nodulations. CT, besides confirming the gallbladder nodules, revealed multiple masses in the stomach, duodenum and ileum. Malignant melanoma lesions were confirmed by histopathological and immunohistochemical analyses of bioptic material obtained from endoscopic examination. In patients with history of melanoma, careful inspection of GI tract should be prompted adopting adequate imaging techniques and endoscopy in order to better influence treatment planning and prognosis.
In this case report, we describe a rare case of spontaneous diaphragmatic hernia with perforation of the incarcerated ascending colon and subsequent formation of tension pneumothorax. A 73-year-old male with a past medical history of chronic right pleural effusion, restrictive ventilatory impairment and hypertension presented to us for evaluation of severe right chest pain of few days’ duration and severe dyspnoea. The chest radiograph revealed the presence of a loop of bowel in the basal right hemithorax with associated air/fluid levels. A CT scan of the chest confirmed the hydropneumothorax and revealed a right lower lobe ipo-expansion and a flogistic lung consolidation. After surgery, the patient underwent a contrast-enhanced CT scan of the chest, which showed no abnormal findings.
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