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From
Post-traumatic Intrathoracic and Subcutaneous Splenosis
Rasim Bakhtiyar Bayramov, Khayala Ismayil Ismayilzada, Sayyara Dunyamali Huseynova
American Journal of Medical Case Reports
.
2024
, 12(5), 81-84 doi:10.12691/ajmcr-12-5-4
Figure 1.
Non-enhanced abdominal CT Axial images showing a rounded pleural-based soft tissue nodule (A, B. white arrows) and multiple solid nodular subcutaneous lesions at the left upper abdominal wall (B. white arrowhead)
Full size figure and legend
Figure 2.
Non-enhanced abdominal CT Sagital (C) and Coronal (D) images
Full size figure and legend
Figure 3.
Abdominal MR Axial T2 (A) and T1 (B) imaging: Multiple subcutaneous nodular lesions are isointense with paravertebral muscles on T1WI, hyperintense on T2WI (white arrowheads)
Full size figure and legend
Figure 4.
Abdominal MR Axial DWI (C) and T1 post-contrast Fat-sat images (D, E): subcutaneous nodular lesions are showing high signal on diffusion-weighted images (C. white arrowhead), homogeneously enhanced multiple subcutaneous nodular lesions (D. white arrowhead) and left pleural-based nodular lesion (E. white arrowhead) after contrast administration
Full size figure and legend
Figure 5.
Hematoxylin & Eosin stain at x40 magnification. Splenic parenchyma is composed of the red pulp (arrow heads) and white pulp (arrow). White pulp with primary and secondary follicles composed of mature B-lymphocytes. Red pulp with sinuses, vasculature, and cords of Billroth
Full size figure and legend
Figure 6.
Hematoxylin & Eosin stain at x200 magnification. The splenic tissue consists of red pulp, white pulp, and central arteries. Thick connective tissue containing blood vessels next to the red pulp of the spleen
Full size figure and legend