Abstract

A 35-year-old woman was admitted for weight loss, fatigue, and epigastric and back pain. She had undergone uterine myomectomy 6 weeks previously, and light microscopic examination revealed actinomycosis. Radiologic examination showed 5×4×4 cm and 2×2×2 cm solid lesions in the left liver lobe. Ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy could not exclude the possibility of malignancy. We decided to perform an explorative laparotomy. Frozen sections indicatedEchinococcus alveolaris infection or granulomatous inflammatory disease, and left hepatic lobectomy was performed. Histologic examination revealed hepatic actinomycosis. After 6 months' penicillin treatment, there was no sign of recurrence. This case of hepatic actinomycosis following uterine infection without gross involvement of any other abdominal organ raises questions on the dissemination pathway. The other interesting feature of this case is the short interval from the presumed initiatory event to the presence of the hepatic deposits.

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