A 54-year-old
perimenopausal woman complained of abnormal uterine bleedings and lower
abdominal pain for 6 months. Personal antecedents were smoking, hypertension,
chronic obstruction pulmonary disease, obstructive sleep apnea, obesity (BMI
42.7 kg/m2) and nulliparity.The first exploration showed
high tumor markers (Ca125 890 UI/ml, Ca19.9 960 UI/ml) and an enlarged uterus
with thickened endometrium, but the gynecological examination was unreliable.
A diagnostic
hysteroscopy showed an abnormal growth on the entire endometrial cavity with
atypical vascularization. Biopsy
was consistent with low-grade endometrial adenocarcinoma.The pelvic
magnetic resonance (MR) showed a large uterus, occupied by an endometrial
carcinoma 4 mm close to theArchives of Inflammation welcomes research
submissions on all aspects of inflammation which is an open access,
peer-reviewed online journal. The intention is that the journal should reflect
both the experimental and clinical aspects of inflammation.
We will
facilitate article submission, rapid article quality assurance through 'peer
review', article formatting and processing to a final product which will allow
high visibility, impact and provoke debate.uterine serosa. There was an
invasion to the cervix stromal, a left 20 cm heterogeneous and a hypovascular
multiloculated adnexal mass adhered to mesosigma. No ascites or carcinomatosis
were found.A computerized tomography (CT) was performed finding a 6 cm solid
left renal tumor suspicious of malignancy, and unspecific pelvic and paraaortic
lymph nodes.
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