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Leiomyoma Information

A leiomyoma (plural is 'leiomyomata') is a benign smooth muscle neoplasm that is not premalignant. They can occur in any organ, but the most common forms occur in the uterus, small bowel and the esophagus.

Contents

Etymology

Leiomyoma enucleated from a uterus. External surface on left; cut surface on right

Uterine leiomyomata

Main article: Uterine fibroids

Uterine fibroids are leiomyomata of the uterine smooth muscle. As other leiomyomata, they are benign, but may lead to excessive menstrual bleeding (menorrhagia), often cause anemia and may lead to infertility. Enucleation is removal of fibroids without removing the uterus (hysterectomy), which is also commonly performed. Laser surgery (called myolysis) is increasingly used, and provides a viable alternative to traditional surgeries.

Oral contraceptive pills can be used to decrease excessive menstrual bleeding and pain associated with uterine fibroids. [1]

Uterine leiomyomas originate in the myometrium and are classified by location:

A rare form of these tumors is lipoleiomyoma[2].

Esophageal

They are also the most common benign esophageal tumour, though this accounts for less than 1% of esophageal neoplasms. The remainder consists mainly of carcinomas. Although the vast majority of benign esophageal tumors are clinically silent and go undetected, large or strategically located tumors may become symptomatic.[3]

Cutaneous

Leiomyomas of the skin are generally (1) acquired, and (2) divided into several categories[4][5]:627:

Leiomyoma of jejunum

Leiomyoma is the most common benign tumor of small bowel. Approximately 50% of cases are found in the jejunum, followed by the ileum in 31% of cases. Almost one half of all lesions are less than 5 centimeters.[6]

Diagnosis

Diagnosis depends on position of the myomas. Traditional Transabdominal or Transvaginal ultrasonogram can detect large submucosal and transmural myomas. For submucosal myomas saline infusion sonography is the best.

Treatment

Medical treatment

GnRH antagonists for 3–6 months are used to reduce the size of the myomas. It usually reduces the size by 60% to 70%, but once the medication is stopped the myomas will grow back.

Surgical treatment

Myomectomy is a choice to remove myomas. It is usually done when the patient wants to preserve their fertility. This can be performed with either traditional surgery or through laparoscopy.

Total Abdominal or Vaginal hysterectomy with Bilateral Salpingo-oophorectomy is the definitive treatment.

Additional images

Uterine lipoleiomyoma, a type of leiomyoma. H&E stain.

See also

References

This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (October 2008)
  1. ^ Obstet Gynecol. 2006 Jun;107(6):1453-72.
  2. ^ Walid MS, Heaton RL (2010). "Case report of a cervical lipoleiomyoma with an incidentally discovered ovarian granulosa cell tumor – imaging and minimal-invasive surgical procedure". GMS Ger Med Sci 8 (26). doi:10.3205/000115.
  3. ^ James C. Chou, MD & Frank G. Gress, MD. "Benign Esophageal Tumors". Esophageal Cancer Overview (Cancer of the Esophagus). Armenian Health Network, Health.am. http://www.health.am/cr/benign-esophageal-tumors/. Retrieved 2007-03-21.
  4. ^ Freedberg, et al. (2003). Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine. (6th ed.). Page 1033. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0071380760.
  5. ^ James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005). Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: Clinical Dermatology. (10th ed.). Saunders. ISBN 0721629210.
  6. ^ By Michael P. Buetow, M.D.. "Leiomyoma of Jejunum". Applied Radiology Online. http://www.appliedradiology.com/case/case.asp?ID=88&SubCatID=97&CatID=43&ThreadID=. Retrieved 2007-03-21.

External links

·  · Diseases of the skin and appendages by morphology
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Dermal and subcutaneous epidermal inclusion cyst · hemangioma · dermatofibroma · keloid · lipoma · neurofibroma · xanthoma · Kaposi's sarcoma · infantile digital fibromatosis · granular cell tumor · leiomyoma · lymphangioma circumscriptum · myxoid cyst
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·  ·Connective/soft tissue tumors and sarcomas (ICD-O 8800–9059) (C45–C49/D17–D21, 171/214–215)
Not otherwise specified (8800–8809) Soft tissue sarcoma · Desmoplastic small round cell tumor
Connective tissue neoplasm
Fibromatous (8810–8839) Fibroma/fibrosarcoma: Dermatofibrosarcoma · Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans · Desmoplastic fibroma Fibroma/fibromatosis: Aggressive infantile fibromatosis · Aponeurotic fibroma · Collagenous fibroma · Diffuse infantile fibromatosis · Familial myxovascular fibromas · Fibroma of tendon sheath · Fibromatosis colli · Infantile digital fibromatosis · Juvenile hyaline fibromatosis · Plantar fibromatosis · Pleomorphic fibroma · Oral submucous fibrosis Histiocytoma/histiocytic sarcoma: Benign fibrous histiocytoma · Malignant fibrous histiocytoma · Atypical fibroxanthoma Solitary fibrous tumor
Myxomatous (8840–8849) Myxoma/myxosarcoma (Cutaneous myxoma, Superficial acral fibromyxoma) · Angiomyxoma · Ossifying fibromyxoid tumour
Fibroepithelial (9000–9039) Brenner tumour · Fibroadenoma · Phyllodes tumor
Synovial-like (9040–9049) Synovial sarcoma · Clear-cell sarcoma
Lipomatous (8850–8889) Lipoma/liposarcoma (Myelolipoma, Myxoid liposarcoma) · PEComa (Angiomyolipoma) Chondroid lipoma · Intradermal spindle cell lipoma · Pleomorphic lipoma · Benign lipoblastomatosis · Spindle cell lipoma · Hibernoma
Myomatous (8890–8929) general: Myoma/myosarcoma smooth muscle: Leiomyoma/leiomyosarcoma skeletal muscle: Rhabdomyoma/rhabdomyosarcoma: Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (Sarcoma botryoides) · Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma Leiomyoma · Angioleiomyoma · Angiolipoleiomyoma · Genital leiomyoma · Leiomyosarcoma · Multiple cutaneous and uterine leiomyomatosis syndrome · Multiple cutaneous leiomyoma · Neural fibrolipoma · Solitary cutaneous leiomyoma
Complex mixed and stromal (8930–8999) Adenomyoma · Pleomorphic adenoma · Mixed Müllerian tumor · Mesoblastic nephroma · Wilms' tumor · Rhabdoid tumour · Clear-cell sarcoma of the kidney · Hepatoblastoma · Pancreatoblastoma · Carcinosarcoma
Mesothelial (9050–9059) Mesothelioma · Adenomatoid tumor

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Categories: Dermal and subcutaneous growths | Anatomical pathology | Benign neoplasms

 

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