Late diagnosis of heel sarcoma

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31837/cir.urug/5.1.3

Keywords:

sarcoma, heel, surgery}

Abstract

39-year-old woman, consulted for heel pain for a year, with anodyne X-ray. At 5 months, she presented an abscessed tumor in the heel (Fig. 1), and drainage and biopsy of the tumor was performed, which reported high-grade spindle cell sarcoma. An MRI study was completed, which described a 5-cm excretory tumor contacting the calcaneus and plantar fascia (Fig. 2: yellow arrows).

It was pending to start chemotherapy. After a month, she presented with cough and hemoptysis, and the chest tomography revealed bilateral pulmonary metastases with a large tumor in the right upper lobe (Fig. 3: yellow arrows).

At 15 days, he presented an acute abdomen, and emergency surgery was found to find jejunal perforation due to a tumor implant with peritoneal carcinomatosis and multiple liver metastases. A segmental resection of the jejunum with anastomosis was performed, and she was discharged and died after a month due to the evolution of the disease.

Sarcomas present a rapid progression with development of metastases. The early diagnosis of these tumors is vital to improve the prognosis.

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Published

2020-09-08

How to Cite

1.
Ponce Villar Úrsula, Peiró Monzó F, Seguí Gregori J. Late diagnosis of heel sarcoma. Cir. Urug. [Internet]. 2020 Sep. 8 [cited 2026 Mar. 28];5(1):1-3. Available from: https://replica-revista.scu.org.uy/index.php/cir_urug/article/view/1915

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