1. Mucin-producing adenoma associated with pancreas divisum and hepatic hilar carcinoma: an autopsy case.
- Author
-
Origuchi, Nobuto, Kimura, Wataru, Muto, Tetsuichiro, Esaki, Yukiyoshi, Origuchi, N, Kimura, W, Muto, T, and Esaki, Y
- Abstract
We present the autopsy case of an 82-year-old Japanese woman with a mucin-producing adenoma accompanied by pancreas divisum and a hepatic hilar carcinoma. She had suffered from a cholangiocellular carcinoma at the hepatic hilus for 2 months, which was treated with radiation and chemotherapy. She did not complain of any abdominal pain. Obstructive jaundice deteriorated despite percutaneous transhepatic bile duct drainage, and she died of hepatic insufficiency. At autopsy, a hepatic tumor was confirmed to have caused severe obstructive jaundice. Histological examinations showed moderately to poorly differentiated cholangiocellular adenocarcinoma with squamous metaplasia, probably due to radiation. A yellowish mucinous tumor was found in the head of the pancreas near the minor papilla. It consisted of multiple rice-sized cystic lesions with thin septa. Although it had no capsule, its margin was clear. Neither a wide opening of the major or minor papilla nor mucous drainage was observed. Gross examinations revealed unfused pancreatic ducts. The slightly dilatated dorsal duct and a branch of the mildly dilatated ventral duct showed tumor involvement. Histological examinations showed mild atypia of the epithelia, and this pancreatic tumor was diagnosed as branch duct-type mucin-producing adenoma with postradiation dysplasia. The combination of a mucin-producing tumor and pancreas divisum is rare, and this is only the third reported case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF