" Heterotopic abdominal wall ossification: A case report " information
被引:0
作者:
Karimi, Mohadeseh
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机构:
Hormozgan Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Dept Pathol, Bandar Abbas, Iran
Univ Hormozga, Bandar Abbas, IranHormozgan Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Dept Pathol, Bandar Abbas, Iran
Karimi, Mohadeseh
[1
,2
]
Mousavi, Seyed Abdollah
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Hormozgan Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Dept Pathol, Bandar Abbas, Iran
Univ Hormozga, Bandar Abbas, IranHormozgan Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Dept Pathol, Bandar Abbas, Iran
Mousavi, Seyed Abdollah
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Hormozgan Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Dept Pathol, Bandar Abbas, Iran
[2] Univ Hormozga, Bandar Abbas, Iran
来源:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY CASE REPORTS
|
2024年
/
117卷
Introduction and importance: Heterotopic ossification is forming a new bone in tissues that do not normally ossify. HO was first reported in 1901 by Askanazy and Lubarsh in a case report study. The range of HO is wide from minute foci to large clinically significant ossification. The incidence of HO in abdominal scars is extremely low. Case presentation: We present an 84-year-old man referred to our hospital after an unsuccessful elective colostomy reversal in a local hospital. The colostomy was made for fecal diversion after sigmoidectomy due to treatment of sigmoid volvulus about three months ago. The patient had a past medical history of hypertension for 8 years under treatment of amiloride. Clinical discussion: In general appearance, the patient was not ill or toxic. Vital signs were normal. Postoperatively Patient did not defecate. In his physical examination was not found abdominal tenderness or rebound tenderness. The patient underwent laparotomy which revealed significant retroperitoneal adhesion and colostomy was reversed. Accidentally was found a dense structure with bone-like consistency in the abdominal wall close to the scar was resected. The specimen Pathologic examination showed metaplastic bone deposition with mature bone trabeculae and heterotopic ossification was confirmed. Conclusion: We report a rare case of HO that was identified at the abdominal wall. Heterotopic ossification can lead to serious complications. However, in symptomatic patients, surgical excision is an acceptable treatment, unlike in asymptomatic patients.