Marlon San Martín-Riera, Jennifer Vega-Carrión, Francisco Paredes-Játiva, Grace Tapia-Navas, Andrés Escobar-Cortez, Genesis Carreño-Oliveros, Gabriela Castillo-Andrade, Andrea Villarreal-Juris
{"title":"Abdominal Wall Abscess: An Infrequent Presentation of Colon Adenocarcinoma","authors":"Marlon San Martín-Riera, Jennifer Vega-Carrión, Francisco Paredes-Játiva, Grace Tapia-Navas, Andrés Escobar-Cortez, Genesis Carreño-Oliveros, Gabriela Castillo-Andrade, Andrea Villarreal-Juris","doi":"10.36347/sjams.2023.v11i09.008","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction: Colonic carcinoma has a variety of clinical presentations, however, invasion of the abdominal wall arising from the transverse colon is a rare one, as seen in this case report. Case report: 62-year-old patient with diffuse high intensity abdominal pain, fever, nausea, vomiting and an epigastric abscessed heterogeneous mass (8 x 7 x 7cm). A water-soluble contrast enema was performed, showing diverticula, absence of distal colon contrast transition and the apple core sign, compatible with transverse colon obstruction. A transverse colectomy was performed, with primary colo-colonic end-to-end anastomosis, including omentectomy and complete en-bloc resection of the affected abdominal wall area. The histopathological findings showed a transverse colon adenocarcinoma with abdominal wall invasion; all surgical margins were free of disease (R0), and 24 lymph nodes were retrieved. Patients’ recovery was successful. Discussion: Locally advanced colorectal cancers invade adjacent organs without distant metastases. They may result in abscess formation even in unusual locations like the abdominal wall, which is a rare complication (0.3 to 4%). Colon cancer diagnosis before surgery may not always be possible; and a flawed diagnosis can determine an incomplete treatment because the intraoperative macroscopic malignancy recognition is not always achievable. En-bloc resection is the gold standard treatment to accomplish a complete resection, with histologically negative margins and no residual tumor (R0). Conclusion: Colon adenocarcinoma may rarely present as an abdominal wall abscess. Image studies may include CT, radiography, etc. but the patient’s clinical status should always be prioritized; those who present abdominal obstruction with a high risk of sepsis and mortality should be offered immediate surgical treatment. En-bloc resection is the gold standard to accomplish histologically negative margins and no residual tumor.","PeriodicalId":471520,"journal":{"name":"Scholars journal of applied medical sciences","volume":"78 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Scholars journal of applied medical sciences","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.36347/sjams.2023.v11i09.008","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Colonic carcinoma has a variety of clinical presentations, however, invasion of the abdominal wall arising from the transverse colon is a rare one, as seen in this case report. Case report: 62-year-old patient with diffuse high intensity abdominal pain, fever, nausea, vomiting and an epigastric abscessed heterogeneous mass (8 x 7 x 7cm). A water-soluble contrast enema was performed, showing diverticula, absence of distal colon contrast transition and the apple core sign, compatible with transverse colon obstruction. A transverse colectomy was performed, with primary colo-colonic end-to-end anastomosis, including omentectomy and complete en-bloc resection of the affected abdominal wall area. The histopathological findings showed a transverse colon adenocarcinoma with abdominal wall invasion; all surgical margins were free of disease (R0), and 24 lymph nodes were retrieved. Patients’ recovery was successful. Discussion: Locally advanced colorectal cancers invade adjacent organs without distant metastases. They may result in abscess formation even in unusual locations like the abdominal wall, which is a rare complication (0.3 to 4%). Colon cancer diagnosis before surgery may not always be possible; and a flawed diagnosis can determine an incomplete treatment because the intraoperative macroscopic malignancy recognition is not always achievable. En-bloc resection is the gold standard treatment to accomplish a complete resection, with histologically negative margins and no residual tumor (R0). Conclusion: Colon adenocarcinoma may rarely present as an abdominal wall abscess. Image studies may include CT, radiography, etc. but the patient’s clinical status should always be prioritized; those who present abdominal obstruction with a high risk of sepsis and mortality should be offered immediate surgical treatment. En-bloc resection is the gold standard to accomplish histologically negative margins and no residual tumor.