Korean J Gastrointest Endosc.  1995 Sep;15(3):563-569.

Three Cases of Colonic Lymphangioma Diagnosed by Colonoscopic Polypectomy

Abstract

Lymphangiomas are made up of multiple lymphatic channels lined by benign-appearing endothelial cells. The lesions can occur anywhere in the body but most commonly affect head, neck and axilla. It rarely involves the gastrointestinal tract and particularly lymphangioma of the colon is very rare. Histologically, it is classified three types as simple or capillary, cavernous, and cystic. We experienced three cases of cavernous lymphangioma of the ascending colon. Case 1, 56-year-old male, had lymphangioma accompanied by ulcerating cancer of the cecum. Case 2, 51-year-old female, had lymphangioma of cecum. Case 3, 41-year-old male had lymphangioma at ileocecal valve. All cases could be diagnosed by colonoscopic snare polypectomy.

Keyword

Lymphangioma; Colonoscopic diagnosis; Polypectomy

MeSH Terms

Adult
Axilla
Capillaries
Cecal Neoplasms
Cecum
Colon*
Colon, Ascending
Endothelial Cells
Female
Gastrointestinal Tract
Head
Humans
Ileocecal Valve
Lymphangioma*
Male
Middle Aged
Neck
SNARE Proteins
Ulcer
SNARE Proteins
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