Duodenal obstruction induced by retroperitoneal progression of bladder cancer: a report of two cases

Bladder cancer usually forms a papillary structure. Progression along the cavity or membranous structures surrounding the bladder, rectum, or retroperitoneum without formation of a discrete mass is rare. We here present two patients with duodenal obstruction caused by retroperitoneal progression of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Abdominal imaging 2019-04, Vol.44 (4), p.1223-1229
Hauptverfasser: Tokunaga, Koji, Furuta, Akihiro, Arizono, Shigeki, Teramoto, Yuki, Negoro, Hiromitsu, Kido, Aki, Isoda, Hiroyoshi, Togashi, Kaori
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container_end_page 1229
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1223
container_title Abdominal imaging
container_volume 44
creator Tokunaga, Koji
Furuta, Akihiro
Arizono, Shigeki
Teramoto, Yuki
Negoro, Hiromitsu
Kido, Aki
Isoda, Hiroyoshi
Togashi, Kaori
description Bladder cancer usually forms a papillary structure. Progression along the cavity or membranous structures surrounding the bladder, rectum, or retroperitoneum without formation of a discrete mass is rare. We here present two patients with duodenal obstruction caused by retroperitoneal progression of bladder cancer, in both of whom computed tomography revealed bladder and rectal wall thickening with a malignant target sign, thickened mesorectal fascia with abnormal tissue stranding, and increased perirectal fat density. Both cancers progressed despite treatment, as indicated by faint abnormal tissue stranding and increased retroperitoneal fat density along the retromesenteric plane from the pelvis to the duodenum. Subsequently, both patients developed obstruction in the horizontal portion of the duodenum, still without formation of a mass lesion. These two patients highlight the challenges associated with retroperitoneal invasion by bladder cancer in the absence of a mass lesion and underscore the importance of considering cancer progression in patients with bowel obstruction, even when there is no obvious mass lesion and/or only minor retroperitoneal findings. Progression along the retromesenteric plane may be the key pathway via which progressive bladder cancer results in duodenal obstruction without or with a minor mass lesion.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00261-018-1874-8
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Progression along the cavity or membranous structures surrounding the bladder, rectum, or retroperitoneum without formation of a discrete mass is rare. We here present two patients with duodenal obstruction caused by retroperitoneal progression of bladder cancer, in both of whom computed tomography revealed bladder and rectal wall thickening with a malignant target sign, thickened mesorectal fascia with abnormal tissue stranding, and increased perirectal fat density. Both cancers progressed despite treatment, as indicated by faint abnormal tissue stranding and increased retroperitoneal fat density along the retromesenteric plane from the pelvis to the duodenum. Subsequently, both patients developed obstruction in the horizontal portion of the duodenum, still without formation of a mass lesion. 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subjects BLADDER
Bladder cancer
Cancer
Computed tomography
COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY
DENSITY
Duodenum
FASCIA
Gastroenterology
Hepatology
Imaging
Intestine
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
NEOPLASMS
Patients
PELVIS
Radiology
RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE
RECTUM
Retroperitoneum
SMALL INTESTINE
Special Section: Distinguished Papers from JSAR
Stranding
Thickening
Tissues
title Duodenal obstruction induced by retroperitoneal progression of bladder cancer: a report of two cases
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