27 November 2020
: Case report
Multiple Primary Malignancies of the Colon, Stomach, and Kidney in a Patient with Bowel Obstruction Requiring Emergency Surgery: A Case Report
Rare coexistence of disease or pathology
Kholoud H. AlBaqmi1ABDEFG*, Faisal A. AlMudaiheem1ABDEFG, Sami Boghdadly1ABDEFG, Khadijah A. AlHussaini2D, Nada Shokor3D, Nourah AlOudah3DDOI: 10.12659/AJCR.926472
Am J Case Rep 2020; 21:e926472
Figure 2. (A) Intravenous contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan at the level of the kidneys in the axial plane showing an incidental cortical exophytic interpolar renal lesion (yellow arrow) with enhancement that is suspicious for renal cell carcinoma. (B) Another smaller exophytic lesion (blue arrow) is seen in the coronal image of the left renal cortex with no enhancement, consistent with a cyst (blue arrow). (C) Ultrasonography performed on the same day showed the suspicious lesion (yellow arrow). The lesion’s heterogenous echogenicity, solid component (red star), and lack of posterior acoustic shadow confirmed that it was solid.