Fascia-preserving, Less Invasive Surgery for Abdominal Wall Desmoid: A Retrospective Study of 7 Cases

Jatal, S. N. and Jatal, Sudhir and Punpale, Ajay and Ingle, Sachin (2024) Fascia-preserving, Less Invasive Surgery for Abdominal Wall Desmoid: A Retrospective Study of 7 Cases. Asian Journal of Research in Surgery, 7 (2). pp. 220-228.

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Abstract

Desmoid tumors are benign, tumors arising from connective tissue within musculoaponeurotic structures. Classically these tumors do not metastatic but locally invasive and high rate of recurrence. Desmoid tumors, also known as aggressive fibromatosis, deep fibromatosis or musculoaponeurotic fibromatosis are rare tumors. They have an incidence rate of approximately 2-4 cases per million individuals and represents about 0.03% of all neoplasms and 3% of all soft tissue tumors. The highest incidence is between the age of 30 - 40 years with a strong prevalence among fertile aged women and female to male ratio in 2:1. They are uncommon during menopause.

Desmoid tumors could be extra abdominal, intra-abdominal and abdominal wall. The commonest site is the anterior abdominal wall, with an incidence of 50% approximately 5-10% of cases are associated with familial adenomatosis polyposis and gardener syndrome.

In our study, we are reporting three female patients in between the age of 30-50 years. Diagnosis confirmed on CT imaging and wide surgical excision with clear margin was performed.

We performed Fascia-Preserving, less invasive surgery for abdominal wall desmoid.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Pacific Library > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@pacificlibrary.org
Date Deposited: 16 Jul 2024 07:10
Last Modified: 16 Jul 2024 07:10
URI: http://editor.classicopenlibrary.com/id/eprint/1824

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