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Polish Journal of Pathology
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2/2010
vol. 61
 
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Cavernous haemangioma of the oviduct

Andrzej Wojnar
,
Katarzyna Drożdż
,
Piotr Dzięgiel

POL J PATHOL 2010; 2: 103-104
Online publish date: 2010/09/14
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Introduction

Haemangiomas (haemangiomata) represent benign tumours of vascular origin. Macroscopically they are relatively sharply delineated, they lack any capsule, they are purple in colour, spongy nodules of various size. Under microscope, capillary haemangiomas can be distinguished from cavernous haemangiomas. The first consist of proliferating, sprouting in laminas endothelial cells, which gradually become transformed to canaliculi with a single layer of endothelium. On the other hand, cavernous haemangiomas are formed by cavernally widened irregular vascular spaces, lined with endothelia with no signs of atypia. Under microscope, both capillary and cavernous haemangiomas are filled with erythrocytes. Capillary haemangiomas manifest mainly in the skin, subcutaneous tissue and in mucous membranes. Cavernous haemangiomas used to be noted in the liver, bones and skeletal muscles. In the female genital tract haemangiomas are rare and used to be noted in the vagina [1]. In the available literature, only six cases were noted of haemangioma of the oviduct [1-6].

Clinical history

A 69-year-old woman was admitted to the surgery department in the Lower Silesian Centre of Oncology due to adenocarcinoma of endometrium, diagnosed in the scrapings. The genital organ was removed and the adenocarcinoma was found in the endometrial polyp. In addition, the body of the uterus contained smooth muscle myoma, 130 mm in diameter. Uterine adnexa manifested no pathology except for a simple cyst in the left ovary, 50 mm in diameter, and a cavernous haemangioma in the right oviduct, 3 mm in diameter. Moreover, a non-infiltrating lobular mammary carcinoma was detected in the patient’s left breast and metastases in thoracic vertebra 7 and 8, under microscope manifesting traits of metastatic carcinoma of glandular origin. The patient manifested also transient paralysis of both upper and lower extremities. Histopathological examination: routine staining with haematoxylin and eosin (H + E) (No. 13135-13150/08) of the right oviductal nodule presented a typical pattern of smaller and larger irregular cavernous spaces lined with endothelium, which contained erythrocytes (Fig. 1). The nodule was situated just under oviductal mucosa while the vascular spaces were surrounded by slightly hyalinated connective tissue and smooth muscle cells. Additionally, an immunohistochemical examination was performed on the paraf­-fin sections, evaluating expression of CD31 (+), CD34 (+) – (Fig. 2), EMA (–), vimentin (+), LYVE-1 (–), desmin (–), smooth muscle actin (+).

Discussion

In the analysed literature of the subject, oviductal haemangiomas used to be noted in patients aged from 23 to 77 [1-6]. The nodules showed diameters ranging from 5 to 20 mm and affected mostly the left oviduct. In two cases, they represented the cause of peritoneal haematoma [3, 4]. The remaining patients were admitted to the surgery department due to adenocarcinoma in uterine body peritoneum [1], irregular menstruation [6] and intestinal torsion [5]. One of the tumours represented an incidental nodule, detected during the autopsy of the patient who died due to meningitis [2]. Occasionally, congenital multifocal vascular deformations were noted [1, 3]. The lesion described by us represented an accidental finding and due to its size and localization it produced no specific signs or symptoms. Histological structure of the tumour, even if as a rule unequivocal, requires differentiation from lymphangioma, smooth muscle cell vascular myoma, mesothelioma, histiocytoid angioma or adenomatoid tumour. In the differential diagnosis immunocytochemical studies are recommended. In the case of haemangioma, the tumour manifests positive reactions for CD31, CD34; vimentin and SMA. The tumour manifests no positive reactions for LYVE-1 (which distinguishes it from lymphangioma) EMA (which excludes glandular origin of the tumour) and Ki-67 (which excludes malignant transformation of the tumour). In the described case, the expression of CD31, CD34, vimentin and SMA has been documented, which in the absence of LYVE-1 and Ki67 expression, unequivocally has confirmed the type of the detected oviduct tumour.

References  1. Ebrahimi T, Okagaki T. Hemangioma of the fallopian tube. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1973;115: 864-865.  2. Gusmano G. Angioma of the Fallopian tubes; anatomopathological contribution. Minerva Ginec 1951; 3: 616-620.  3. Joglekar VM. Haemangioma of the fallopian tube. Case report. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1979; 86: 823-825.  4. Patel DR, Kawalek R, Iger J. Cavernous hemangioma of the fallopian tube. International Surgery 1972; 58: 420-421.  5. Ragins AB, Crane RD. Adenomatoid tumors of the fallopian tube. Am J Pathol 1948; 24: 933-945.  6. Telerman A. Haemangioma of the fallopian tube. J Obstet Gynaecol Br Commonw 1969; 76: 559-560.

Address for correspondence
Piotr Dzięgiel MD, PhD Chair and Department of Histology and Embryology Medical University in Wrocław ul. Chałubińskiego 6a 50-367 Wrocław, Poland; tel. +48 71 784 13 54 faks +48 71 784 00 82 e-mail: piotr@hist.am.wroc.pl
Copyright: © 2010 Polish Association of Pathologists and the Polish Branch of the International Academy of Pathology This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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