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. 2012 Apr 28;4(4):135–140. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v4.i4.135

Figure 4.

Figure 4

A 35-year-old woman with 52-mo of cyclic pain (after a cesarean delivery 2 years previously) that was not relieved by a surgical intervention for “intestinal adhesions” performed 44 mo before admission. A: US displays a huge (widest diameter: 60 mm), heterogeneous, irregularly-shaped mass occupying (between white arrows) the entire abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness and infiltrating the underlying muscle; B: A cystic area is seen along the posterior aspect of the mass (arrow); C: Cut surface of the surgical specimen: note the irregular shape of the highly vascularised mass with margins infiltrating adjacent tissues, the huge amount of white fibrotic strands and the multiple, well-defined haemorrhagic cystic collections (black arrows point out the greatest collections).