IntroductionA hydatid cyst of the breast is rare and often goes unnoticed by mammography and ultrasound. Preoperative diagnosis may be performed using fine-needle aspiration cytology, which also minimizes the risk of intraoperative rupture.Case presentationWe report the case of a 70-year-old Spanish woman who was diagnosed with a hydatid cyst using fine-needle aspiration cytology before surgery.ConclusionFine-needle aspiration cytology is an accurate and safe technique that can allow surgery to be avoided, especially in older patients or patients with high surgical risk.
Two patients with recalcitrant pyoderma gangrenosum were treated with oral cyclosporin A (5 mg/kg body-weight/day). Healing of the lesions was achieved in Patient 1 within 1 month of starting treatment, but new areas of ulceration appeared when the dose was reduced to 3 mg/kg body-weight/day. The ulcers showed marked improvement by 3 weeks after the start of treatment in Patient 2 and remained inactive at a maintenance dosage of 100 mg/day, but there was no change in the associated seronegative arthritis. A steroid-sparing effect of CyA was evident in both patients. It is suggested that a lower dose of cyclosporin A than doses used previously in the treatment of pyoderma gangrenosum may be equally effective.
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