Login / Signup

Peritoneal involvement by salpingoliths clinical significance and cytological challenges of interpretation.

Siba El HusseinDominick GuerreroSamer N Khader
Published in: Diagnostic cytopathology (2019)
We present a case of salpingoliths detected in peritoneal washing, during an elective bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, in a 32 years old woman with history of familial BRCA gene mutation. Salpingoliths are psammoma body-like types of calcification that originate from the fallopian tubes and can be encountered in peritoneal washings. Unlike psammoma bodies, salpingoliths have been tagged to benign and hyperplastic processes more often than neoplastic processes. Misinterpreting salpingoliths as psammoma bodies in peritoneal washings can be misleading for both cytopathologists and clinicians, especially as in the presented case, where there is a high risk for ovarian carcinoma. In this article, we aim to shed light on this rare finding, and report theories explaining its pathogenesis, in addition we provide an example of its challenging cytological presentation, to increase awareness among cytopathologists.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • chronic kidney disease
  • early onset
  • palliative care
  • breast cancer risk
  • fine needle aspiration
  • ultrasound guided