+ Author Affiliations
- ↵*Correspondence address. Tel: +34-965919272; Fax: +34-965919551; E-mail: acien@umh.es
- Received November 1, 2011.
- Revision received December 12, 2011.
- Accepted December 19, 2011.
Abstract
BACKGROUND To raise
awareness about the accessory and cavitated uterine masses (ACUM) with
functional endometrium as a different entity
from adult adenomyosis and to highlight the
importance of a correct diagnosis, we studied four new cases of ACUM and
15 cases
reported as juvenile cystic adenomyoma (JCA) by
reviewing the literature from the last year. This entity is problematic
because
of a broad differential diagnosis, including
rudimentary and cavitated uterine horns; and is generally
underdiagnosed, being
more frequent than previously thought.
METHODS We report four
cases of young women who underwent surgery in our hospital from January
to July 2011 after presenting with
an ACUM. We also reviewed and tabulated the
cases from literature beginning in 2010. Main outcome measures were
diagnostic
tools, surgical and histopathological findings
and improvement of symptoms.
RESULTS The addition
of the four cases reported here to the 15 published as JCA raises the
total number of cases of ACUMs to 19,
which is more than all of the cases reported
prior to 2010. In our cases, it is interesting to highlight that one of
them
also had an adjacent accessory rudimentary tube
and another had two ACUMs at the same location. All patients suffered
from
severe dysmenorrhea and pelvic pain and were
young women. Suspicion, transvaginal ultrasound and magnetic resonance
image
were found to be the best diagnostic tools. Most
of the cases were treated by laparoscopic tumorectomy.
CONCLUSIONS ACUMs are
generally underdiagnosed and often reported as JCAs but they are not
adenomyosis. Early surgical treatment involving
the laparoscopic or laparotomic removal of the
mass could prevent the usual prolonged suffering of these young women.
In our
opinion, this entity is a new variety of
Müllerian anomaly.
Source : http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/27/3/683.abstract
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