A 40-year-old African American woman with sickle cell trait, a renal cell mass, and an ulcerated scalp lesion

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Abstract

Patient: 40-year-old African American woman. Chief Complaint: Painless hematuria. History of Present Illness: The patient had 2 episodes of painless gross hematuria before seeking treatment in our emergency department; she reported no other symptoms. Her urinalysis results were positive for hemoglobin and revealed more than 50 red blood cells per high-powered field on microscopic examination. A 3-phase computed tomography (CT) scan revealed an enhancing 3.9 × 2.5 cm lesion in the superior/interpolar region of the right kidney, which suggested renal cell carcinoma or transitional cell carcinoma. A renal biopsy guided by the CT image was not diagnostic. A nephrectomy was performed. Family History: The patient's maternal grandmother had died of breast cancer. Social History: The patient reports never being a smoker and reports no recreational drug use. Follow-up: Two months after her nephrectomy, a positron emission tomography (PET) scan performed on the patient did not reveal metastatic disease. Two months later, she developed a painful scalp lesion, which slowly grew over the next several months, eventually ulcerated, and did not heal despite appropriate wound care. A biopsy of the lesion had a histologic appearance similar to that of the nephrectomy specimen.

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Grindstaff, S. L., & Rodriguez, R. (2013, March). A 40-year-old African American woman with sickle cell trait, a renal cell mass, and an ulcerated scalp lesion. Laboratory Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1309/LMUGEIY4KSWBRC14

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