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  • Title: Abdominal wall lump after cesarean delivery.
    Author: Li MH, Leng JH, Jiang Y, Lang JH.
    Journal: Obstet Gynecol; 2012 Aug; 120(2 Pt 2):494-497. PubMed ID: 22825277.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: An abdominal wall desmoid tumor is a rare event, has a strong tendency for local invasion and recurrence, and usually presents as an abdominal lump. CASE: A 35-year-old multiparous woman presented with a painful abdominal lump that had been slowly increasing in size. The pain was not associated with menstruation. Clinical examination, ultrasonography, and abdominal magnetic resonance imaging were performed and suggested a large, sharply defined mass measuring approximately 11 × 7.1 cm in the right anterolateral abdominal wall. There was no family history of familial adenomatous polyposis. The mass was excised and sent for histopathologic examination, which indicated abdominal wall desmoid tumor. CONCLUSION: Abdominal wall desmoid tumors can be diagnostic dilemmas and should be considered in the differential diagnosis for lumps in the abdomen in women.
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