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Pancreatic Mass with an Unusual Pathology: A Case Report


Author(s) : Anna Reed Healey Andrew J. Jiao Long R., 
Publisher : N/A
Publication Date : 2008
ISSN : N/A
Abstract : Intra-abdominal abscesses formation in patients with no preceding symptoms is rare. Infection of the pancreas occurs in 5أƒآ¢أ‚€أ‚“9% of patients with acute pancreatitis, more commonly as a complication of necrotising or severe pancreatitis. We have reported a case of a 64-year-old almost entirely asymptomatic man who underwent a Whipple's procedure following extensive investigation of a pancreatic mass. The pathology and histology showed no evidence of malignancy, and instead a true pancreatic abscess, centred around an impacted cholesterol calculus in the distal CBD. Of suspicious pancreatic masses that are resected, chronic choledocholithiasis is the aetiology in less than 5% of nonmalignant or أƒâ€ڑأ‚“false positives.أƒâ€ڑأ‚â€‌ This report describes such a case.,