How is abdominal muscle tumour treated?

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summary

Myoma is also called myofibroma. It's mostly seen under the skin. Of course, it can grow in the abdomen. Generally speaking, it grows slowly. It's usually small, with clear edges, smooth surface, hard texture, and can be pushed. If mixed with other components, it becomes fibromyoma, fibroadenoma, fibrolipoma, etc. Fibroma, especially desmoid in abdominal wall muscle, can be malignant and should be completely removed as soon as possible. Next, how can I treat abdominal myoma? Let me tell you this.

How is abdominal muscle tumour treated?

First: xanthfibroma: it usually occurs in the dermis or subcutaneous layer of trunk and proximal upper arm. It often starts from small papules after trauma or itching. The mass is hard and the edge is unclear. Due to internal bleeding, it contains hemosiderin and is dark brown. If the tumor is more than 1cm and grows fast, it should be suspected to be fibrosarcoma. Surgical resection should be thorough.

Second: dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans: located in the dermis, protruding from the body surface, smooth surface skin, like keloids, prone to occur in the trunk, low-grade malignant, with pseudocapsule, easy to relapse after resection, multiple recurrence, increased malignancy, blood metastasis, should be removed as soon as possible with enough normal skin and deep adjacent fascia tumor.

Third: banded fibroma: abdominal wall muscle due to trauma or postnatal repair hyperplasia, no obvious capsule, surgery should be removed.

matters needing attention

Tumor growth is slow, general metastasis is not much money, other symptoms are too poor, more common in subcutaneous, no adhesion with the skin, there is a certain degree of activity. Growth is slow, generally small, the surface of the skin is normal, smooth subcutaneous activity of the round tumor can be touched. No tenderness state clear, hard texture. A few of them have malignant biological behavior, relapse many times, but few have distant metastasis. The recurrence rate was 25-57%. The recurrence time is usually 1 month to 1 year after operation, even more than 10 years, so this kind of tumor is also called invasive fibromatosis. Multiple recurrences can lead to a wider range of lesions, and irrepressible growth, invasion of important organs and life-threatening.