A searchable database of
medically documented cases

About the Project

Spontaneous Regression Of Symptomatic Thymoma Caused By Infarction

Hori et al., 2008Thyroid cancer

Hori, D., Endo, S., Tsubochi, H., Nokubi, M., & Sohara, Y. (2008). Spontaneous regression of symptomatic thymoma caused by infarction. General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 56(9), 468-471. doi:10.1007/s11748-008-0277-0

Abstract

We herein report a 38-year-old man who had spontaneous regression of a thymoma with repeating episodes of chest pain that initially occurred 2 years earlier when the tumor was 35 mm in the long axis. Left video-assisted thoracoscopic thymothymectomy was performed. Pathology examination showed a thymoma 15 mm in the long axis, classified B2 in the World Health Organization classification and stage II by Masaoka staging. The feeding arteriole of the tumor, occluded by organized thrombi, was suggested to be the cause of coagulation necrosis. The patient recovered well from surgery without complication and with no episodes of chest pain at the 9-month outpatient follow-up.

Case Details

No case details have been reported for this case.

Treatment & Mechanisms

No treatment or mechanism details have been reported for this case.