Pseudoxanthomatous Salpingitis: A Rare Granulomatous Pathology of the Fallopian Tube
This case report details a 31-year-old woman with primary infertility, endometriosis, and ascites diagnosed with pseudoxanthoma salpinx, a rare granulomatous pathology of the fallopian tube.
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This case report describes pseudoxanthomatous salpingitis (PXS), a rare granulomatous-appearing fallopian tube pathology characterized by haemosiderin-laden pigmented histiocytes, and presents a 31-year-old woman with primary infertility and ovarian endometriosis who developed recurrent, massive hemorrhagic ascites. High-level management included diagnostic laparoscopy with biopsies across multiple sites, after imaging and ascitic-fluid analyses were inconclusive and empirical anti-tuberculosis therapy was given; histopathology showed expanded tubal plicae filled with macrophage collections and congested vessels consistent with PXS, with ascitic fluid lacking endometriotic spots or malignancy. A limitation is that, as an individual case, causality and mechanism could not be directly proven, and the repeated ascites re-accumulation despite hormonal suppression complicated interpretation. Relevance to endometriosis: PXS is presented as occurring “on a background of endometriosis,” and the discussion ties PXS to endometriosis-associated bleeding as a proposed mechanism for the haemosiderin-laden histiocytes, using this case’s unusual recurrent hemorrhagic ascites as the clinical context.
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References (17)
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- Unusual presentation of endometriosis with haemorrhagic ascites – A case report via openalex
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