• Title/Summary/Keyword: Homunculus

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Thoracic Fetiform Teratoma: A Case Report of a Very Rare Entity in a Peruvian Hospital

  • Ludwig Caceres-Farfan;Wildor Samir Cubas;Franco Alban;Jorge Mantilla-Vasquez;Johny Mayta-Rodriguez;Karen Mendoza-Guerra
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.56 no.4
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    • pp.282-285
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    • 2023
  • Mature fetiform teratoma, or homunculus, is a term coined for a rare variant of teratoma with a prevalence of 0.01% of teratomas. There have been very few cases reported in the world, and its thoracic presentation is extremely unusual. We present the case of a 31-year-old female patient with a history of progressive chest pain in the left hemithorax, associated with dyspnea on moderate exertion and cough. Imaging studies revealed a large intrathoracic tumor visually compatible with a teratoma. Surgical resection by a clamshell approach was successful, and subsequent anatomopathological studies of the operative specimen concluded that the mass was a mature fetiform thoracic teratoma. The treatment of this entity is generally surgical and includes wide resection due to its large adhesive component to surrounding tissues. Thus, the cardiothoracic surgeon must know approaches that allow wide resection, making these cases true surgical challenges.

2 Cases of Lower Limb Monoplegia due to Brain Cortical Infarction (대뇌 피질 경색으로 인한 하지 단마비 환자 한방치험 2례)

  • Shin, Jung-Ae;Son, Dong-Hyuk;Yu, Kyung-Suk;Lee, Jin-Goo;Lee, Young-Goo
    • The Journal of Internal Korean Medicine
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.263-269
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    • 2001
  • Monoplegia is the paralysis of either the upper or lower limb. Monoplegia is commonly caused by an injury to the cerebral cortex; it is rarely caused by an injury to the internal capsule, brain stem, or spinal cord. Most cerebral cortex is derived from the occlusion of a brain cortex blood vessel due to thrombus or embolus. According to motor homunculus, lower limb monoplegia occurs from limited damage to the most upper part of the primary motor area(Brodmann's area 4, located in precentral gyrus). Clinically, lower limb monoplegia due to brain cortical infarction is commonly misunderstood as monoplegia due to spinal injury because the lesion is situated at the most upper part of precentral gyrus. We had many difficulties in finding lesion on brain CT, but we diagnosed two patients correctly by using an MRI, who have lower limb monoplegia due to brain cortical infarction oriental treatment.

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