We report a case of a resected hepatic inflammatory pseudotumor (IPT) protruding from the liver surface. A 69-year-old male with diabetes mellitus was admitted to hospital for investigation of an hepatic mass. An irregularly shaped, low-echoic mass measuring 21 × 18 mm was identified by ultrasound in S6. On computed tomography, the tumor appeared to be growing extrahepatically. After contrast enhancement, the lesion showed persistent peripheral enhancement, while the central part was hypoenhanced. On T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the central portion of the lesion was hyperintense compared with the periphery. EOB-enhanced MRI revealed the mass to be being hypointense in contrast to the surrounding liver parenchyma in the hepatobiliary phase. On diffusion-weighted images, the lesion was hyperintense. Percutaneous biopsy was not attempted to avoid tumor cell dissemination. The patient underwent partial hepatectomy because of suspected malignancy. Histopathological examination of the resected specimen revealed fibrotic tissue and abundant vessels in the periphery, while a massive infiltration of inflammatory cells and fewer vessels were observed in the center. The patient was finally diagnosed with hepatic IPT of the fibrohistiocytic type.
HighlightsKyphoscoliosis has various surgical difficulties for laparoscopic cholecystectomy.Low-lying costal arches prevents surgeons from accessing the gall bladder.A transumbilical multi-port and left abdominal port is useful for patients with kyphoscoliosis.
Here, we present a case of malignant biliary tract obstruction with severe obesity, which was successfully treated by endoscopic ultrasonography-guided biliary drainage (EUS-BD). A female patient in her sixties who had been undergoing chemotherapy for unresectable pancreatic head cancer was admitted to our institution for obstructive jaundice. She had diabetes mellitus, and her body mass index was 35.1 kg/m2. Initially, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) was performed, but bile duct cannulation was unsuccessful. Percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) from the left hepatic biliary tree also failed. Although a second PTBD attempt from the right hepatic lobe was accomplished, biliary tract bleeding followed, and the catheter was dislodged. Consequently, EUS-BD (choledochoduodenostomy), followed by direct metallic stent placement, was performed as a third drainage method. Her postprocedural course was uneventful. Following discharge, she spent the rest of her life at home without recurrent jaundice or readmission. In cases of severe obesity, we consider EUS-BD, rather than PTBD, as the second drainage method of choice for distal malignant biliary obstruction when ERCP fails.
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