Pseudotumoral Actinomycosis Mimicking Malignant Colic Disease: A Case Report and Literature Review

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Abstract

Abdominal actinomycosis is a rare, chronic, and often unrecognized suppurative disease. It is caused by an anaerobic gram-positive bacterium, most commonly Actinomyces israeli. Colonic actinomycosis is rarely reported and may be responsible for a pseudotumoral syndrome leading, in the suspicion of malignancy, to a large and mutilating excisional surgery. It is usually the histopathological examination of the surgical specimens that accurately corrects the diagnosis. Here, we report a rare case of a colic actinomycotic involvement taking a pseudotumoral form. The diagnosis was made based on the pathological examination of the surgical piece. Intravenous and then adjuvant oral penicillin G treatment has allowed a favorable clinical evolution. This observation illustrates the preoperative diagnostic difficulties of this rare disease.

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Jabi, R., Ramdani, H., Elmir, S., Elmejjati, F., Serji, B., El Harroudi, T., & Bouziane, M. (2020, August 1). Pseudotumoral Actinomycosis Mimicking Malignant Colic Disease: A Case Report and Literature Review. Visceral Medicine. S. Karger AG. https://doi.org/10.1159/000502895

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