Patient: Female, 30Final Diagnosis: Thoracic endometriosis syndromeSymptoms: Abdominal painMedication: —Clinical Procedure: Videothoracoscopic pleurodesisSpecialty: PulmonologyObjective:Rare co-existance of disease or pathologyBackground:Catamenial pneumothorax (CP) is a spontaneous pneumothorax commonly associated with menstrual periods. Endometrial tissues most commonly involve the pelvic region. However, after the pelvis, the lungs are most frequently involved. Thoracic endometriosis should always be suspected in young women presenting with CP.Case Report:A 30-year-old woman with history of endometriosis presented with chief complaint of umbilical pain. A computerized tomography (CT) scan of the abdomen and pelvis was performed, which showed an incidental finding of a large right-sided pneumothorax. Chest X-ray imaging showed 50% pneumothorax. A right-sided chest tube was placed, and after the procedure, a chest X-ray image showed expansion of the right lung. The patient was readmitted for elective resection of an umbilical mass and was again incidentally found to have a recurrent pneumothorax on the right side. She underwent videothoracoscopic pleurodesis with pathology, establishing the diagnosis of catamenial pneumothorax.Conclusions:Thoracic endometriosis resulting in catamenial pneumothorax should be suspected in young women of child-bearing age. Treatment options still under debate include endoscopic resection and videothoracoscopic pleurodesis followed by gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) therapy to reduce the rate of postoperative recurrence.
Patient: Female, 70Final Diagnosis: Follicular variant of papillary thyroid cancer with renal metastasesSymptoms: Bleeding per vaginumMedication: —Clinical Procedure: Total thyroidectomySpecialty: OncologyObjective:Rare diseaseBackground:Follicular variant of papillary thyroid cancer (FV-PTC) is the second most common subtype of papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) after classic PTC. FV-PTC is characterized by nuclear features consistent with classic PTC but has a follicular architecture that lacks classic papillary morphology. Thyroid cancer rarely metastasizes to the kidney. Only 6 cases of FV-PTC metastasizing to the kidney have been reported in the English literature. We are reporting a case of FV-PTC with bilateral renal metastases discovered incidentally during work-up of primary endometrial cancer.Case Report:A 70-year-old woman presented with post-menopausal bleeding secondary to endometrial cancer. Staging work-up showed multiple bilateral lung nodules, bilateral soft tissue kidney masses, and multinodular goiter. The pathological and immnohistochemical profile of the lung biopsy was consistent with primary well-differentiated lung adenocarcinoma. Follow-up computerized tomography scan showed stable lung nodules and enlarging renal masses, which was suggestive of bilateral renal cancer. While the histologic features of the renal biopsy were not typical, the immunohistochemical staining of renal biopsy was positive for Paired box 8, thyroid transcription factor-1, thyroglobulin, and cytokeratin 7, suggesting the thyroid as the primary cancer site. The final histopathology on surgical specimen of total thyroidectomy revealed follicular variant of papillary thyroid cancer.Conclusions:The presence of pulmonary nodules and kidney masses does not always suggest the lung or the kidney as primary tumor sites. The clinician should be aware of the possibility of metastasis and look for the primary source, which in the present case was FV-PTC. Immunohistochemistry plays an important role in determining the primary site of origin. In case of multiple-organ metastases, each metastatic lesion should be biopsied as soon as possible for definitive diagnosis and appropriate treatment.
We report 2 cases of splenic postchemotherapy histiocyte-rich pseudotumor. Each patient had a history of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, treated with multiagent chemotherapy. Computed tomography scans performed on both patients showed splenic masses. A positron emission tomography scan performed on 1 patient showed increased metabolic activity. The preoperative diagnosis in both patients was recurrent lymphoma, prompting splenectomy. The splenectomy specimens showed multiple, tan-white, firm nodules, up to 3.5 cm in diameter, that were histologically composed of central necrotic B cells (CD20+/CD3-), consistent with necrotic lymphoma, surrounded by numerous lipid-laden (xanthomatous) histiocytes. Clinical staging studies at the time of splenectomy showed no other sites of disease. We conclude that these histologic and immunophenotypic findings represent chemotherapy-induced tumor necrosis with a florid histiocytic reaction mimicking residual viable lymphoma. Others have used descriptive terminology or the term xanthomatous pseudotumor for these lesions that have been only rarely reported in the spleen previously.
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