Giant benign mesenteric cysts (mesothelioma and lymphangioma): A report of two cases

Mesenteric cysts are a rare group of intra-abdominal tumors located in the mesentery or omentum, most of this lesion are asymptomatically but occasionally presents with non-specific symptoms, which makes diagnosis difficult. We present two cases of giant mesenteric cyst in our Institution, the first...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of surgery case reports 2024-12, Vol.125, p.110587, Article 110587
Hauptverfasser: Prior-Rosas, Jesús Eduardo, Mejía-Ruíz, Brenda, Magdaleno-Becerra, Brenda Areli, Nava-Tenorio, Chantal Guadalupe, Alonso-Domínguez, Sheila Marilyn, Botello-Ortiz, Gabriela Eugenia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mesenteric cysts are a rare group of intra-abdominal tumors located in the mesentery or omentum, most of this lesion are asymptomatically but occasionally presents with non-specific symptoms, which makes diagnosis difficult. We present two cases of giant mesenteric cyst in our Institution, the first case is a women of 23 years with previous gynecologic surgery with chronic abdominal pain and large abdominal mass CT showed a giant intraabdominal 30 × 25 × 15 cm, the patient went to laparotomy and a large mesenteric tumor found. The Histopathology reported a Benign cyst mesothelioma (BCM). The second case is a 47 year male with intermittent abdominal pain and abdominal CT shows a 20x21x15 cm tumor. Laparotomy was performed. Histopathology reported a large lymphangioma. BCM tumors are rare intrabdominal lesions often diagnosed in premenopausal women. Its etiopathogenesis is still unclear, associated risk factors are endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease and previous pelvic surgery. Lymphangiomas are an infrequent cyst tumors. It results from a failure in the evolutionary development of the lymphatic system, often localized in the head and neck and its localization in the abdomen is even rare. The definitive diagnosis is made by histopathology. Mesenteric cysts diagnosis if often challenge due to nonspecific symptoms and significant overlap in imaging appearance between the different entities, its diagnosis should be in mind when encounter a cystic abdominal tumor, surgical complete removal of this tumors is the optimal treatment to prevent recurrence and complications. •Mesenteric cysts are unusual tumors with variably pathogenesis and have multiple differential diagnosis.•Usually presents with nonspecific clinic and the diagnosis can be challenging.•Images can be helpful describing these tumors, but histopathology is the gold standard for diagnosis.•Complete surgical resection is recommended to prevent recurrence and eliminate the potential risk of malignancy.
ISSN:2210-2612
2210-2612
DOI:10.1016/j.ijscr.2024.110587