Korean J Gastrointest Endosc.  1991 Nov;11(2):299-302.

A Case of Metastatic Melanoma of the Stomach

Abstract

The potential of malignant melanoma to metastasize to all parts of the body is well known. Metastatic melanoma of the stomach may present with vague gastrointestinal symptoms, abdominai pain, or gastrointestinal bleeding. When gastrointestinal symptoms occur in a patient with known melanoma, gastric metastases should be considered. Melanoma metastatic to the stomach develops multiple small ulcerating masses. These sharply delineated submucosal lesions have been described as having a "bull's eye" or "target" configuration. Barium X-ray study, endoscopy, cytology study, and biopsy may yield the diagnosis. The prognosis is poor. We report a case of metastatic melanoma of the stomach with the review of the literature.

Keyword

Malignant melanoma; Stomach

MeSH Terms

Barium
Biopsy
Diagnosis
Endoscopy
Hemorrhage
Humans
Melanoma*
Neoplasm Metastasis
Prognosis
Stomach*
Ulcer
Barium
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