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Robotic management of huge hepatic angiomyolipoma: A case report and literature review.

Andrew ParkKush SavsaniAnjelica AlfonsoEster JoBryce S HartfieldDaisuke ImaiAamir A KhanAmit SharmaMuhammad Irfan SaeedVinay KumaranAdrian CotterellDavid A BrunoYuzuru SambommatsuSeung Duk Lee
Published in: Annals of hepato-biliary-pancreatic surgery (2024)
Hepatic angiomyolipoma (HAML) is a rare, benign mesenchymal liver tumor encountered in Asia, primarily in females, and can be found within the right hepatic lobe, but also in other areas of the liver. Immunohistochemically, HAMLs are characteristically positive for human melanoma black-45 antigen (HMB-45) and can histochemically vary in the composition of angiomatous, lipomatous, and myomatous tissue, together with the presence of epithelioid cells. In this case report, we discuss a previously healthy patient presenting with bloating and previously documented concern of liver lesions, found to have HAML confirmed by surgical pathology. Surgery was decided, as HAMLs greater than 10 cm are at risk of rupture. This is one of the first documented cases of HAML resected through robot-assisted bisegmentectomy and cholecystectomy, and therefore, intraoperative images have been included to assist in the planning of future robotic cases.
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