Leiomiomatosis benigna metastásica: reporte de Caso Clínico

Autores/as

  • Paz García interna de Medicina, Escuela de Medicina, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Juan Ignacio Errázuriz Residente de Radiología, Escuela de Medicina, Pontificia Universidad católica de Chile
  • Carlos Fernández Departamento de Ginecología, Clinica Las Condes
  • Eugenio Arteaga Departamento de Endocrinología, Facultad de Medicina Pontificia Universidad catolica de Chile

Palabras clave:

Hysterectomy, Leiomyomatosis, Menopause, Morcellation, Myoma

Resumen

Benign intraperitoneal metastatic leiomyomatosis is a rare benign disease that is observed when a leiomyoma is present in the peritoneal surface. Women who have undergone hysterectomy for leiomyomas are most commonly affected. Patients are usually asymptomatic at presentation, being frequently an incidental finding in imaging studies. Ultrasound and CT play an important role in the diagnosis. The lesions are histologically identical to their uterine counterparts. There are different theories about the pathogenesis of the disease, including peritoneal seeding after laparoscopic hysterectomy. Others support the hypothesis of multiple independent foci of smooth muscle proliferation. Treatment, as in uterine leiomyomatosis, is generally conservative. We report a 53 years old hysterectomized woman with intraperitoneal leiomyomas detected in a routine physical examination as mobile abdominal masses who underwent successful laparoscopic resection.

Biografía del autor/a

Eugenio Arteaga, Departamento de Endocrinología, Facultad de Medicina Pontificia Universidad catolica de Chile

Departamento de Endocrinología, Facultad de Medicina, Pontificia Universidad Catòlica de Chile

Descargas

Publicado

2016-12-20

Cómo citar

García, P., Errázuriz, J. I., Fernández, C., & Arteaga, E. (2016). Leiomiomatosis benigna metastásica: reporte de Caso Clínico. Revista Médica De Chile, 145(2). Recuperado a partir de https://mail.revistamedicadechile.cl/index.php/rmedica/article/view/5118

Número

Sección

Reporte de Caso Clínico