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Desmoid cervical tumour following the placing of an internal jugular catheter

A desmoid tumour is a rare fibroblastic tumour and generally located in the abdomen. However, it can also develop on surgical scars. A 36 year-old woman on chronic dialysis consulted for a cervical mass on the left side that was progressively increasing in volume, on the site of a scar of an interna...

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Published in:La Presse médicale (1983) 2004-01, Vol.33 (2), p.95-97
Main Authors: Skhiri, H, Zellama, D, Ameur Frih, M, Moussa, A, Gmar Bouraoui, S, Achour, A, Ben Dhia, N, Zakhama, A, Elmay, M
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container_issue 2
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container_title La Presse médicale (1983)
container_volume 33
creator Skhiri, H
Zellama, D
Ameur Frih, M
Moussa, A
Gmar Bouraoui, S
Achour, A
Ben Dhia, N
Zakhama, A
Elmay, M
description A desmoid tumour is a rare fibroblastic tumour and generally located in the abdomen. However, it can also develop on surgical scars. A 36 year-old woman on chronic dialysis consulted for a cervical mass on the left side that was progressively increasing in volume, on the site of a scar of an internal jugular catheter placed 7 months earlier. Histological analysis of a sample of this mass concluded in a benign fibroblastic proliferation and led to the diagnosis of a desmoid tumour. Study of the patient's history revealed that a left jugular catheter had been placed on two occasions to be used for the hemodialysis approach, the lesion provoked by the latter would explain the development of the desmoid tumour. The potential severity of this tumour is related to its proximity with the carotid, trachea and base of the skull. In general, desmoid tumours, rare benign tumours of the connective tissue, exhibit a complex multifactor etiopathogenesis. A surgical trauma can often trigger-off such tumours.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0755-4982(04)98492-8
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source Elsevier:Jisc Collections:Elsevier Read and Publish Agreement 2022-2024:Freedom Collection (Reading list)
subjects Adult
Catheterization, Central Venous - adverse effects
Female
Fibroma - etiology
Fibroma - pathology
Head and Neck Neoplasms - etiology
Head and Neck Neoplasms - pathology
Humans
Jugular Veins
Neck - pathology
Renal Dialysis
title Desmoid cervical tumour following the placing of an internal jugular catheter
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