• Medicine · Aug 2024

    Review Case Reports

    Thoracoscopic resection of a giant esophageal schwannoma: A case report and review of literature.

    • Shu Chen, Yixuan Zhao, and Yinghao Zhao.
    • Department of Thoracic Surgery, the Second Hospital of Jilin University, Jilin, China.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2024 Aug 30; 103 (35): e39507e39507.

    IntroductionBenign esophageal tumors are uncommon, accounting for approximately 2% of esophageal tumors. Esophageal schwannoma is a much rarer solid tumor with few cases reported in the literature. Open surgery is the surgical approach of choice for the treatment of esophageal tumors. With the advent of thoracoscopy, more and more countries are adopting a thoracoscopic approach to treat esophageal tumors, but there is still no clear surgical standard or modality for the treatment of esophageal tumors.Patient ConcernsA 50-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital. Over the past 2 months, her clinical presentation has included progressively worse swallowing disorder and weight loss. Gastroscopy showed an elevated lesion with a smooth surface visible 18 cm out from the incisors. An electron circumferential ultrasound endoscopy showed a hemispherical bulge with a smooth surface 18 to 23 cm from the incisor; the bulge originated from the intrinsic muscular layer and showed a heterogeneous mixed moderate ultrasound with a little blood flow signal and blue-green elastography in 1 of the sections measuring approximately 4 cm × 3 cm. Chest computed tomography (CT) showed a mass-like soft tissue shadow in the upper esophagus measuring approximately 39 mm × 34 mm, with a CT The lumen was compressed and narrowed, and the lumen of the upper part of the lesion was dilated, and the adjacent trachea was compressed and displaced to the right.InterventionsAfter completion of the examination, assisted by artificial pneumothorax and thoracoscopic resection of esophageal masses were performed.Diagnosis And OutcomesPostoperative pathology report: Mesenchymal-derived tumor (esophagus), combined with immunohistochemical staining results and morphologic features supported schwannoma. The patient's postoperative course was calm. The patient's postoperative dysphagia subsided.ConclusionWe describe a case of successful treatment of a schwannoma of the upper esophagus using artificial pneumothorax-assisted VATS. The combined use of Sox10 and S100 helps to improve the sensitivity and specificity of schwannoma diagnosis. Damage to the esophageal lining was avoided by mixed thoracoscopic and endoscopic exploration. This approach can also be applied to benign esophageal tumors in the thoracic and subthoracic segments, leading to better minimally invasive results.Copyright © 2024 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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