Wednesday 26 April 2023

Intracholecystic Papillary Neoplasm: A Recently Described Rare Entity | Chapter 12 | Research Highlights in Disease and Health Research Vol. 6

 Intracholecystic papillary abnormal growth in animate being (ICPN) is a rare, polypoidal, mucosal abnormal growth in animate being that forms an intraluminal mass and measures ≥ 1 cm in diameter. It is usually non-invasive but concede possibility show low-grade or prime dysplasia. It shows a female predilection. Pain in the above outer one of four equal parts of the abdomen is the most ordinary symptom. Pathologically it is trusted to represent an “adenoma-malignant growth” sequence. Grossly, the intraluminal, papillary tumor may be sessile or pedunculated and exhibits a size range of 1.0- 8.0 cm. It normally occurs in the physique and fundus of the gall bladder. Microscopically, skilled is proliferation of glands organized back-to-back with a scanty amount of intervening stroma. These glands evolve in papillary, tubular, or mixed tubulopapillary patterns. Morphologically, they exhibit differing lineages which involve gastric, biliary, oncocytic, and intestinal subtypes each bearing a specific invulnerable profile. They have a better forecast as compared to different bile duct and pancreatic malignancies. As it is a currently described individual, the features of ICPN are not clear.

Author(s) Details:

Vertika Gupta,
Noida International Institute of Medical Sciences, Noida International University, Greater Noida, India.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RHDHR-V6/article/view/10291

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