Back to Search
Start Over
Rare gastric neoplasm: Malignant glomus tumor of the stomach. A case report
- Source :
- International Journal of Surgery Case Reports
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Highlights • Glomus tumors are rare neoplasms that aris­e from neuromyoarterial canal or glomus body. • In the GI tract, stomach is the most common site for Glomus tumors. • Symptoms usually are non specific and can be discovered incidentally during upper GI endoscopy. • Immunohistochemistry stains after surgical excision or tissue biopsy can confirm the diagnosis. • Surgical treatment is the preferred option for GGTs and long-term follow-up is required due to high metastatic and recurrence rate in the malignant type.<br />Introduction Glomus tumors are rare neoplasms that aris­e from neuromyoarterial canal or glomus body. They are mainly found in the peripheral soft tissue, extremities and rarely developed inside the gastrointestinal tract. In the gastrointestinal tract, the stomach is the most common site for the development of glomus tumors, and most often found in the antrum. Usually, the symptoms of gastric glomus tumors are non specific i.e (abdominal pain, GI bleeding and/or perforation) and possibly discovered incidentally during upper GI endoscopy. Case presentation This is a-56-year-old-male, presented to the emergency department with upper GI bleeding i.e (melena), and signs of shock (HR: 110; BP:80/60), Blood tests showed Hemoglobin level: 5 g/dl. Resuscitation was started with IV fluid and transfusion of 4 units of PRBCs. After resuscitation, He gave a 10 days history of passing black tarry stool, palpitation, headache, dizziness, easily fatigability, malaise, and colicky epigastric abdominal pain. His abdomen was soft, lax with no tenderness, there was fullness at the left upper quadrant. Upper GI endoscopy was performed that showed a large gastric ulcer with adherent clots, necrotic base and oozing at the proximal part of the greater curvature, after that the bleeding was managed with a heater probe and epinephrine injections. The histopathological examination of the biopsy revealed a spindle and epithelioid tumor with the top differential diagnosis being GIST, however other submucosal lesions cannot be excluded. After that, He underwent exploratory laparotomy and wedge resection of the tumor. The final histopathology showed a malignant glomus tumor. Clinical discussion Due to overlapping clinical and radiological features between glomus, GIST and other submucosal lesions, the histopathological examination is considered to be the gold standard for the diagnosis. Surgical resection with negative margin is the treatment of choice for gastric glomus tumors. Conclusion Although gastric glomus tumor is a rare entity and accounts for 1% of all gastric mesenchymal tumors, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis, since preoperative biopsy is difficult and overlapping features with other submucosal lesions. Surgical treatment is the preferred option for gastric glomus tumor and long-term follow-up is required due to high metastatic and recurrence rate in the malignant type.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Exploratory laparotomy
medicine.medical_treatment
Gastric Glomus Tumor
Case Report
Gastric glomus tumors “GGTs”
Submucosal lesions
LECS, laparoscopy endoscopy cooperative surgery
Glomus tumor “GT”
03 medical and health sciences
NSAID, Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
0302 clinical medicine
Glomus body
Upper GI bleeding
Melena
HR, Heart rate
medicine
HPF, High power field
GGT, Gastric glomus tumor
business.industry
fungi
BP, Blood pressure
GIST, Gastrointestinal stromal tumor
medicine.disease
Curvatures of the stomach
EUS-FNB, Endoscopic ultrasound guided fine needle biopsy
Glomus tumor
Malignant Glomus Tumor
GI, Gastrointestinal tract
CK, Cytokeratin
GT, Glomus tumor
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
CT, Computed tomography
SMA, smooth muscle actin
030211 gastroenterology & hepatology
Surgery
Radiology
medicine.symptom
PRBC, Packed red blood cells
business
Gastric Neoplasm
IV, intravenous
EUS, Endoscopic ultrasound
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 22102612
- Volume :
- 81
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International Journal of Surgery Case Reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8786f06a4154a5a0f007ced412ee412f