1 / 39

Clinicopathological Conference

University of the East Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Medical Center , Inc. Department of Surgery. Clinicopathological Conference. Aclan , Beltran Alexis Agbanlog , Nadinne Agoncillo , Karen Eloqui Alianza , Michael Ame , Renalin Ancheta , Melanie Jasmine Ang Ping, Krista Claudine

fern
Télécharger la présentation

Clinicopathological Conference

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. University of the East Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Medical Center, Inc. Department of Surgery Clinicopathological Conference Aclan, Beltran Alexis Agbanlog, Nadinne Agoncillo, Karen Eloqui Alianza, Michael Ame, Renalin Ancheta, Melanie Jasmine Ang Ping, Krista Claudine Ang, Abigail Ang, Jorge Ang, Vincent Arguelles, Carmen

  2. Identifying Data • 52 y/o Female, Filipino, Married, from Cainta, Rizal • Admitted for the 1st time: June 20, 2010

  3. Chief Complaint • Right posterolateral thigh mass of 1 year duration • Weakness of 1 week duration

  4. HPI • 1 year PTA – initial symptoms • Soft, nontender, non erythematous, raised, movable, 1.5 cm posterior thigh, progressive growth • Pertinent positives: • Pertinent negatives: no bloody discharge

  5. HPI • 2 months PTA- • 3 cm , inc in size, bloody discharge on manipulation • Pertinent negatives: no fever, wt loss, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, pain, limitation on movement

  6. HPI • 1 week PTA • Generalized weakness, anorexia, inc in size with excessive bloody discharge (daily) • Incision & Drainage done

  7. TEMPORAL PROFILE

  8. Pertinent Negatives • (-) Hypertension, DM • (-) Past hospitalization, surgery • (-) Smoking, alcohol intake, drug abuse • (-) Family History of HTN, DM, CA

  9. Pertinent Negatives • (-) Weight loss • (-) Limitation in movement • (-) Pain • (-) Exposure to radiation

  10. Pertinent Positives • (+) Anorexia • (+) Bleeding, ulcerating lesion

  11. Notes upon Admission • - ECOG • - Karnofsky • - pale conjunctiva, lips • - pale dry skin • - post. Lateral thigh mass • - 10x10 cm • - firm • - non movable • - pruritic on manipulation • - poorly defined borders • - Excoriating pain, necrotic • - anorexia

  12. Diagnostic Work-up

  13. Diagnostic Work-up

  14. Diagnostic Work-up

  15. Diagnostic Work-up

  16. Diagnostic Work-up • CXR and EKG are normal • Wound specimen revealed heavy growth of P. mirabilis mixed with P. aeruginosa

  17. Diagnostic Work-up • CT Scan (6/22/10): • An irregular mass-like density (2.0 x 4.3 x 4.6 cm) with central air density was seen on subcutaneous region of the right posterolateral thigh surrounded with fat stranding. A nodular, soft density (0.9 x 1.1 x 0.9 cm), most likely an enlarged lymph node, identified in the right inguinal region. No abnormal findings in osseous and soft tissue structures of the left thigh.

  18. Problem #1Right posterolateral thigh mass

  19. Problem #1Right posterolateral thigh mass • Origin- subcutaneous region (CT scan) • Lesion- lobulated; same radio-density as muscle; continuous with the skin • Presence of fat stranding: - damage to the surrounding fat tissue - deeper infiltration - non-movable nodule

  20. Problem #2Anemia & Unstable Angina

  21. Problem #2Anemia & UNSTABLE ANGINA • Growing mass with bloody discharge  Anemia • Evidenced by: decreased hemoglobin and hematocrit levels • ↓Systemic Oxygen Transportation • ↓ Oxygen reaching Cardiac Muscles • Heart compensates via vasoconstriction and ↑ HR • Sustained anemia, inadequate oxygenation  Cardiac muscles become fatigued  Bradycardia • Imbalance in myocardial oxygen demand and supply  Unstable angina and NSTEMI

  22. Problem #3Infection

  23. Problem #3Infection • 1 week PTA: incision and drainage • Predisposed to nosocomial infection • Local infection: (-) fever, unremarkable PE • ↑WBC with neutrophil predominance -Indicating subclinical infectious process present • (+) P. aeruginosa and P. mirabilis - most common bacteria in nosocomial infections

  24. Problem #3Infection • Treatment : • Unasyn • Ampicillin+ Sulfabactam • Indicated for P.mirabilis, S. aures, E.coli • Metronidazole • anaerobic bacteria eg. P. aeruginosa

  25. Differential Diagnoses • Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans • Liposarcoma • Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma

  26. Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans • HISTORY AND PE • Primary fibrosarcoma of the skin • Incidence: 5% (relatively uncommon) • Age of incidence: 20-50 y/o • Rare in very young or very old • Slight male predominance • Locally aggressive • High recurrence rate

  27. Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans • HISTORY AND PE • Presentation: Aggregated protuberant tumors within a firm indurated plaque that may ulcerate • Mobile on palpation • Bloody in latter stages • Varying color from fleshy to reddish brown

  28. Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans • RADIOLOGIC FINDINGS • CT: Attached to the skin; used to visualize bone invasion

  29. Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans • DIAGNOSTIC TESTS • Biopsy • Expected findings: Cellular neoplasm, composed of fibroblasts arranged radially, in a storiform pattern; Mitoses may be present; Epidermis is thinned

  30. Liposarcoma • HISTORY AND PE • Old age; Mean age of incidence: 40-60 y/o • Peak incidence during 50’s • 2nd most common soft tissue sarcoma • Incidence: 14% • Male predilection • Mass is painful in 5% of patients

  31. Liposarcoma • HISTORY AND PE • Presentation: slowly enlarging, painless, non-ulcerating mass • May be retroperitoneal • 40% occuring in lower extremities • Popliteal, thigh, or gluteal areas • Most patients are asymptomatic until tumor is large

  32. Liposarcoma • RADIOLOGIC FINDINGS • X-ray: radio opaque • CT: indistinguishable from other soft tissue sarcomas such as MFH, dermotofibrosarcoma protuberans, etc. • MRI: may appear cystic; not preferred

  33. Liposarcoma • DIAGNOSTIC TESTS • Depends on biopsy • Expected findings: lipoblasts are almost always present  indicate fatty differentiation; they mimic fetal fat cells and contain round, clear cytoplasmic vacuoles that scallop the nucleus

  34. Liposarcoma • RADIOLOGIC FINDINGS • X-ray: radio opaque • CT: indistinguishable from other soft tissue sarcomas such as MFH, dermotofibrosarcoma protuberans, etc. • MRI: not preferred

  35. Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma • HISTORY AND PE • Old age; mean age of occurrence: 50-70 y/o • Most common soft tissue sarcoma • Incidence: 24% • Presentation: Enlarging, painless mass in the thigh • Typically 5-10 cm in diameter • Occurs in deep fascia or skeletal muscle • 75% occurring in lower extremities

  36. Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma • RADIOLOGIC FINDINGS • CT: nonspecific; lobulated; soft tissue; same radiodensity as muscle; • Permeative and lytic, often extending into adjacent soft tissue • if with bone involvement, parallel with that of the long bone • if subcutaneous involvement – continuous with the skin; ill defined borders • fat attenuation is not found in the tumor

  37. Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma • RADIOLOGIC FINDINGS • X-ray: soft tissue mass density • 10% will show diffuse calcifications • MRI – appears with same density as muscle

  38. Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma • DIAGNOSTIC TESTS • Needs core biopsy • Expected findings: background of spindled fibroblasts arranged in a storiform pattern admixed wit large, ovoid, bizarre multinucleated tumor giant cells

  39. Clinical Impression • Soft tissue sarcoma • To Consider: • Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma • Liposarcoma

More Related