Inflammatory Pseudotumor of the Spleen: Review of clinical presentation and diagnostic methods

Authors

  • Hooman Yarmohammadi
  • Dean Nakamoto
  • Peter F. Faulhaber
  • John Miedler
  • Nami Azar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v5i9.758

Keywords:

inflammatory pseudotumor, spleen, image guided, ultrasound, core needle biopsy

Abstract

We describe a 91-year-old woman with a clinical history of invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast diagnosed in 1991 who was admitted because of dizziness, poor appetite, and some swelling and tenderness over her cheeks. The patient's initial work up revealed a 5-cm well-demarcated hypodense solid lesion in her spleen with abnormally intense uptake on PET/CT scan raising suspicion for malignancy i.e. breast metastasis versus lymphoma. Further review demonstrated the presence of this splenic lesion, though slightly smaller, on a CT scan from ten years earlier (2000). An ultasonographic guided core needle splenic biopsy was performed and the pathology result revealed histological findings compatible with inflammatory pseudotumor of the spleen. As a result, unnecessary splenectomy was avoided.

Published

2011-09-14

Issue

Section

Nuclear Medicine / Molecular Imaging