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2 "Pancreatic cyst"
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Case Reports
A Pancreatic Cyst of the Anterior Mediastinum.
Kye Weon Kwon, Kyung Young Jung, Woo Ick Yang
Korean J Pathol. 1998;32(11):1025-1027.
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AbstractAbstract
Although heterotopia of pancreatic tissue is a developmental anomaly found in approximately 2% of all autopsies, pancreatic tissue within the thorax and mediastinum is uncommon. In most of these instances, the pancreatic tissue is a component of gastroenteric duplication cysts, intralobar pulmonary sequestrations or teratomas. We describe an anterior mediastinal cyst consisting entirely of pancreatic tissue. A previously healthy 27-year-old woman was admitted due to chest pain during deep inspiration. The computed tomographic scan of the thorax showed a large cyst occupying the right anterior mediastinum. The excised multilocular cystic lesion measured 12 cm in maximum diameter and contained a brown, turbid fluid. The wall was fibrotic and showed a haphazard mixture of ducts and exocrine acini without islets. The histogenesis of this lesion is unclear.
Macrocystic Form of Serous Cystadenoma of the Pancreas: Two Cases Report.
Ki Seok Jang, Hyo Jin Lee, Moon Hyang Park
Korean J Pathol. 2004;38(6):423-426.
  • 1,857 View
  • 24 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
The macrocystic form of serous cystadenoma of the pancreas is an uncommon benign neoplasm composed of few, relatively large cysts that are lined by uniform, glycogen-rich, cuboidal epithelial cells. We report here on two cases of pathologically proven macrocystic serous cystadenoma of the pancreas in a 45-year-old female patient and a 53-year-old female patient. Both these cysts were lined by low cuboidal epithelia without any evidence of mucin production. There was also no evidence of pancreatitis. These tumors were radiologically suspected as being mucinous cystic neoplasm or pseudocysts. Although the microscopic and immunohistochemical studies of the macrocystic variant are not different from the conventional serous microcystic cystadenoma, their unusual macroscopic features can lead to confusion for the clinicians and radiologists.

J Pathol Transl Med : Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine
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