CASE 14697 Published on 10.05.2017

Para-bladder mass in symptomatic 16-year-old female patient

Section

Uroradiology & genital male imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Schiaffino S, Melani E, Sarzi S. Rollandi GA

Department of Radiology,
Ospedale Galliera
University of Genoa;
Largo Rosanna Benzi 10
16132, Genoa, Italy;
Email:schiaffino.simone@gmail.com
Patient

16 years, female

Categories
Area of Interest Abdomen ; Imaging Technique MR, MR-Diffusion/Perfusion
Clinical History
A 16-year-old female patient presented at the emergency room for pain in the left iliac fossa, exacerbate by effort, without dysuria. The clinical examination revealed pain in the left iliac fossa and arterial hypertension. Urinary stick was negative. FAST ultrasound revealed left lithiasis. During cystoscopy, a parietal protuberance was noted.
Imaging Findings
MRI revealed urinary bladder characterized by an expansive solid lesion, with irregular borders, which involved the left posterior-lateral wall, partially exophytic and protruding into the lumen, with major diameters: 4.4 x 3 centimetres.
The lesion showed intermediate and inhomogeneous MR signal on T2- and T1-weighted images and was heavily hyperintense in DWI with restricted diffusion at ADC. Neither necrotic, haemorrhagic nor fat-content areas appeared.
In the post-contrastographic images the mass appeared markedly hyperintense at the arterial, venous, and equilibrium phase. The left ureteral ostium was not dissociable, but the urography sequences didn’t show hydroureteronephrosis. The lesion appeared in close contiguity with the left lateral vaginal fornix, without clear cleavage fat.

MRI was performed with the following sequences: T1 and T2 FSE, with and without fat saturation, DWI (b=0, 800), LAVA pre- and post-injection of GBCA.
Discussion
Primary paraganglioma (or extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma) of the bladder is a very rare tumour, with less than 250 cases described in literature [1]. It tends to affect females, with a very wide mean range of age (11-84 years) [2]. This is one of the few cases described in patients less than 18 years of age, and one of the biggest, considering the case series published by Henderson and colleagues [1].
The classical clinical presentation of bladder paragangliomas includes: hypertension, gross haematuria, and postmicturition syndrome [1]. Our case presented with low abdominal pain, ureteral lithiasis and hypertension.
In the MRI evaluation of bladder masses, the most important elements that must be considered are: the location in relation to the wall layers, the MRI signal, and the vascularization.
The bladder tumours can originate from each of the wall layer: epithelium, lamina propria, and adventitia serosa. They can be classified as epithelial and non-epithelial [3].
Among the epithelial ones, the great majority are of urothelial origin; other less common are squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma. Epithelial tumours arise as intraluminal filling defects, irregular morphology, while those mesenchymal present themselves as intramural lesions in the smooth and regular margins.
The mesenchymal tumours originate from non-epithelial layers of the bladder wall and they represent 5% of bladder tumours. The paraganglioma is a mesenchymal tumour and the differential diagnosis should be made with other mesenchymal tumours, most commonly encountered in the bladder [4]: especially rhabdomyosarcoma and neurofibroma, less common leiomyosarcoma. Rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common bladder cancer in childhood with greater occurrence in males. It manifests as polypoid and heterogeneous mass at the base of the bladder. The morphology and locally aggressiveness help to distinguish it from paraganglioma.
The neurofibroma is rare and may occur as isolated form or associated with neurofibromatosis type I. It originates from intramural nerve plexus near the bladder trigone. Even angioma must be considered in the differential diagnosis in paediatric age. The angioma manifests as a small single lesion, hypervascular, more commonly in the postero-lateral walls. Benign or malignant tumours to originate from adjacent organs (prostate, uterus, ovary) can mimic bladder tumours [5].
As described in literature, the pre-operative diagnosis of these tumours is very difficult, especially in the absence of typical symptoms. The mesenchymal origin can be suspected in hypervascular submucosal masses covered by a layer of intact urothelium, in association with appropriate clinical assessment.
Differential Diagnosis List
Primary paraganglioma of the urinary bladder.
Rabdomyosarcoma
Leiomyosarcoma
Neurofibroma
Angioma
Ab extrinseco compression
Final Diagnosis
Primary paraganglioma of the urinary bladder.
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/14697
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.14697
ISSN: 1563-4086
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