Caso Flash
Publicado 04/09/2026
Palavras-chave
- Loose bodies,
- Abdominal cavity,
- Fibrohyaline nodule,
- Incidental finding
Direitos de Autor (c) 2026 Beatriz Dias, Carolina Seco, Pedro Almeida, Bárbara Santos, Beatriz Mendes, Catarina Madeira Santos, Elizabeth Cruz, Antonio Rivero

Este trabalho encontra-se publicado com a Licença Internacional Creative Commons Atribuição 4.0.
Como Citar
1.
Dias B, Seco C, Almeida P, Santos B, Mendes B, Madeira Santos C, et al. Loose bodies within the abdominal cavity - a case report. Alg Med [Internet]. 9 de abril de 2026 [citado 18 de abril de 2026];(32):34-5. Disponível em: https://algarvemedico.org/index.php/am/article/view/22
Resumo
Loose bodies of endogenous origin within the abdominal cavity are rare and often discovered incidentally during surgery. We report the case of a 62-year-old male undergoing elective laparoscopic hernioplasty in whom a mobile, pearly white oval mass was identified in the pelvic cavity and removed.Histopathological analysis revealed a benign fibro-hyaline nodule with central microcalcification and no evidence of malignancy. This case highlights the diagnostic challenge posed by these lesions, which may mimic malignant disease, and emphasizes the importance of histological evaluation for definitive diagnosis.
Downloads
Os dados de download ainda não estão disponíveis.
Referências
- 1. Mayfield J, Schammel C, Yurko Y, Schammel DP, Devane AM. Peritoneal loose bodies and the differentiation of fatty abdominal and pelvic lesions. Radiol Case Rep. 2020 Jul 3;15(9):1506-1511. doi: 10.1016/j.radcr.2020.06.040. PMID: 32670450; PMCID: PMC7339014.
- 2. Pereira JM, Sirlin CB, Pinto PS, Casola G. CT and MR imaging of extrahepatic fatty masses of the abdomen and pelvis: techniques, diagnosis, differential diagnosis, and pitfalls. Radiographics. 2005 Jan-Feb;25(1):69-85. doi: 10.1148/rg.251045074. PMID: 15653588.
- 3. Moore GA: Appendices epiploicae . N Engl J Med 1940;222:919-921