Schwannoma of the ascending colon is an extremely rare neoplasm that is often discovered incidentally in the asymptomatic older population on surveillance colonoscopy. We present the case of a symptomatic 22year-old male presenting with one month of discomfort in the right lower abdominal quadrant, abdominal bloating, and hematochezia. A sessile polyp measuring 0.5 cm was identified in the ascending colon on the colonoscopy. The polyp was completely resected using cold snare polypectomy. Histological examination of the resected polyp with hematoxylin-eosin staining revealed small nodules of bland spindle cells with focal nuclear condensation. The lesional cells tested positive for S-100 and SOX-10 on immunohistochemical analysis, establishing the diagnosis of benign schwannoma. Since this lesion was submucosal, its diagnosis required an endoscopic biopsy that could only be performed on the mucosa. It was difficult to distinguish it from other mesenchymal tumors (gastrointestinal stromal tumor or leiomyoma), and this makes the differential diagnosis exceedingly challenging. If the immunohistochemistry is positive for S-100 and negative for C-KIT, CD-34, actin, and desmin, it aids in diagnosis. These tumors have non-specific radiological features and are asymptomatic.
Soft tissue chondroma is a relatively rare, slowly growing, benign cartilaginous tumor. This solitary mass can imitate chondrosarcomas in radiologic and histological characteristics. The diagnosis is hard to establish on clinical presentation and relies on careful radiological examination. The lesion is equally prevalent in both genders and primarily affects people in their forties and sixties. They may occur in any part of the body; however, they are most commonly observed in hand and foot. We report the case of a 61-year-old female who presented with heavily ossified soft tissue chondroma within the plantar fascia of her left foot. A conclusive diagnosis was established via histopathological examination. The chondroma was marginally excised, and the postoperative period was uneventful.
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