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Hemangioma of The Latissimus Dorsi Muscle, a Very Rare Chest Wall Tumor
Author(s) -
Hüseyin Melek,
Dursun Atakul,
Ozan Özlücan,
Mihriban Gürbüzel,
Elif Torun Parmaksız,
Barış Medetoğlu,
Göğüs Cerrahisi,
Plastik Cerrahi,
Genel Cerrahi,
Göğüs Hastalıkları,
Bingöl Devlet,
Türk Derneği,
Latissimus Muscules,
İçerisinde Dorsi,
Nadir Çok,
Duvarı Göğüs,
Cerrahisi Göğüs,
Yedikule Kliniği,
Hastalıkları Ve Göğüs,
Göğüs Ve,
E Cerrahisi
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
the annals of clinical and analytical medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2667-663X
DOI - 10.4328/jcam.193
Subject(s) - medicine , latissimus dorsi muscle , hemangioma , surgery
Hemangiomas, which are among the least common benign chest wall masses, consist of dilated, tortuous, thin-walled vessels. They are typically cutaneous in location, intramuscular (IMH) location is uncommon, with a reported frequency of 0.8% among all benign vascular lesions. Hemangiomas of the latissimus dorsi muscle are very rare. Relatively rarely do they occur in young adults and are more frequent in females. A 25 year-old female patient applied to our clinic with a progressively growing painful mass lesion on her back which existed for 1 month. Physical examination revealed a firm, tender and mobile mass lesion in the inferior part of right scapula. Thoracic MRI demonstrated a well-enhanced mass lesion with 3 cm diameter. The lesion was totally excised and histopathologically diagnosed as cavernous hemangioma in latissimus dorsi muscle. Hemangiomas are extremely rare in adults and in latissimus dorsi muscle. We report this rare chest wall disorder presenting its unusual location and effective surgical treatment. The radiological, pathological and surgical images of the case are reviewed with accompanied literature.

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