[Aggressive angiomyxoma in a male patient: a case report]

Standard

[Aggressive angiomyxoma in a male patient: a case report]. / Böthig, R; Ahyai, Sascha; Kühn, K; Pramono, S.

in: AKTUEL UROL, Jahrgang 39, Nr. 1, 1, 2008, S. 64-67.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Böthig, R, Ahyai, S, Kühn, K & Pramono, S 2008, '[Aggressive angiomyxoma in a male patient: a case report]', AKTUEL UROL, Jg. 39, Nr. 1, 1, S. 64-67. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18228191?dopt=Citation>

APA

Vancouver

Böthig R, Ahyai S, Kühn K, Pramono S. [Aggressive angiomyxoma in a male patient: a case report]. AKTUEL UROL. 2008;39(1):64-67. 1.

Bibtex

@article{eac210571fb54195b6063d4a38f23d2d,
title = "[Aggressive angiomyxoma in a male patient: a case report]",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Aggressive angiomyxoma (AA) is a rare mesenchymal tumour of the connective tissue of the pelvis, which was described mainly in women in their reproductive period of life. Until now 45 cases of AA in men are documented with predominantly inguinal, parafunicular or scrotal localisation. These tumours slowly infiltrate the adjacent tissue and since symptoms are noticed only later these tumours have reached a considerable size at the time of diagnosis. In contrast to their benign histological appearance and almost entire absence of metastasis AA tends to (multiple) relapse. CASE REPORT: We report on a 46-year-old male with a large tumour in the perineum. After complete resection, histological analysis revealed an AA. 26 months after surgery there is no evidence of relapse. CONCLUSION: AA has to be considered as a possible diagnosis for obscure tumours of the pelvis. Since these tumours tend to relapse, margin-negative resection is most important. Also in cases of relapse, secondary excision should be achieved within healthy tissue. Adjuvant hormonal chemotherapy or radiation can be considered in cases of multiple relapse. Because of the risk of local recurrence rather than metastasis, these patients need a long-term follow up.",
author = "R B{\"o}thig and Sascha Ahyai and K K{\"u}hn and S Pramono",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "39",
pages = "64--67",
journal = "AKTUEL UROL",
issn = "0001-7868",
publisher = "Georg Thieme Verlag KG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - [Aggressive angiomyxoma in a male patient: a case report]

AU - Böthig, R

AU - Ahyai, Sascha

AU - Kühn, K

AU - Pramono, S

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Aggressive angiomyxoma (AA) is a rare mesenchymal tumour of the connective tissue of the pelvis, which was described mainly in women in their reproductive period of life. Until now 45 cases of AA in men are documented with predominantly inguinal, parafunicular or scrotal localisation. These tumours slowly infiltrate the adjacent tissue and since symptoms are noticed only later these tumours have reached a considerable size at the time of diagnosis. In contrast to their benign histological appearance and almost entire absence of metastasis AA tends to (multiple) relapse. CASE REPORT: We report on a 46-year-old male with a large tumour in the perineum. After complete resection, histological analysis revealed an AA. 26 months after surgery there is no evidence of relapse. CONCLUSION: AA has to be considered as a possible diagnosis for obscure tumours of the pelvis. Since these tumours tend to relapse, margin-negative resection is most important. Also in cases of relapse, secondary excision should be achieved within healthy tissue. Adjuvant hormonal chemotherapy or radiation can be considered in cases of multiple relapse. Because of the risk of local recurrence rather than metastasis, these patients need a long-term follow up.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Aggressive angiomyxoma (AA) is a rare mesenchymal tumour of the connective tissue of the pelvis, which was described mainly in women in their reproductive period of life. Until now 45 cases of AA in men are documented with predominantly inguinal, parafunicular or scrotal localisation. These tumours slowly infiltrate the adjacent tissue and since symptoms are noticed only later these tumours have reached a considerable size at the time of diagnosis. In contrast to their benign histological appearance and almost entire absence of metastasis AA tends to (multiple) relapse. CASE REPORT: We report on a 46-year-old male with a large tumour in the perineum. After complete resection, histological analysis revealed an AA. 26 months after surgery there is no evidence of relapse. CONCLUSION: AA has to be considered as a possible diagnosis for obscure tumours of the pelvis. Since these tumours tend to relapse, margin-negative resection is most important. Also in cases of relapse, secondary excision should be achieved within healthy tissue. Adjuvant hormonal chemotherapy or radiation can be considered in cases of multiple relapse. Because of the risk of local recurrence rather than metastasis, these patients need a long-term follow up.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 39

SP - 64

EP - 67

JO - AKTUEL UROL

JF - AKTUEL UROL

SN - 0001-7868

IS - 1

M1 - 1

ER -