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    <Journal>
      <PublisherName>ijcicr</PublisherName>
      <JournalTitle>International Journal of Clinical Investigation and Case Reports</JournalTitle>
      <PISSN>C</PISSN>
      <EISSN>l</EISSN>
      <Volume-Issue>Volume 2, Issue 2</Volume-Issue>
      <PartNumber/>
      <IssueTopic>Multidisciplinary</IssueTopic>
      <IssueLanguage>English</IssueLanguage>
      <Season>(Apr-June)</Season>
      <SpecialIssue>N</SpecialIssue>
      <SupplementaryIssue>N</SupplementaryIssue>
      <IssueOA>Y</IssueOA>
      <PubDate>
        <Year>2023</Year>
        <Month>05</Month>
        <Day>11</Day>
      </PubDate>
      <ArticleType>Medicine</ArticleType>
      <ArticleTitle>Centrally Thrombosed Renal Angiomyolipoma: A COVID-Induced Pathology?</ArticleTitle>
      <SubTitle/>
      <ArticleLanguage>English</ArticleLanguage>
      <ArticleOA>Y</ArticleOA>
      <FirstPage>0</FirstPage>
      <LastPage>0</LastPage>
      <AuthorList>
        <Author>
          <FirstName>Adrian A. Naoun*</FirstName>
          <LastName>(USA)</LastName>
          <AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage>
          <Affiliation/>
          <CorrespondingAuthor>N</CorrespondingAuthor>
          <ORCID/>
        </Author>
      </AuthorList>
      <DOI>10.55828/ijcicr-22-05</DOI>
      <Abstract>Renal angiomyolipomas (AMLs) are benign neoplastic entities paradigmatically composed of smooth muscle, blood vessels, and adipose tissue. The cornerstone of renal AML identification fundamentally entails imaging; however, findings may rarely resemble malignancy and subsequently obfuscate diagnosis. Compellingly, the comorbid effect of viral diseases such as COVID-19 on neoplasm integrity and morphology remains incompletely understood. The present case reports a 46-year-old female presenting with intermittent right flank pain persisting for three weeks. Preliminary sonographic studies revealed a predominantly echogenic, space-occupying lesion with well-defined margins in the right renal cortex undergoing angiogenesis. Shortly thereafter, the patient contracted COVID-19, and the right flank pain progressed to a debilitatingly constant nature described as sharp, stabbing, and aggravating to an eight on a scale of ten. Recovery was uncomplicated; however, the patient presented with mild thrombocytopenia. Contrast-enhanced CT scans elucidated a compelling hypodense mass center suggesting the presence of an encapsulated thrombus accompanied by further invasion of Morison’s pouch 25 days post-initial identification. Histopathological examination of the surgically excised specimen confirmed the likely diagnosis of a centrally thrombosed renal angiomyolipoma. Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection may have ostensibly contributed to neoplasm morphology alterations and subsequent thrombosis, as intrinsic renal cell damage is well-documented in the literature. Consequently, clinicians must remain vigilant that radiographic abnormalities may emerge secondary to comorbid viral infections such as COVID-19 via incompletely understood mechanism(s).</Abstract>
      <AbstractLanguage>English</AbstractLanguage>
      <Keywords>Angiomyolipoma,COVID</Keywords>
      <URLs>
        <Abstract>https://ijcicr.com/ubijournal-v1copy/journals/abstract.php?article_id=14559&amp;title=Centrally Thrombosed Renal Angiomyolipoma: A COVID-Induced Pathology?</Abstract>
      </URLs>
      <References>
        <ReferencesarticleTitle>References</ReferencesarticleTitle>
        <ReferencesfirstPage>16</ReferencesfirstPage>
        <ReferenceslastPage>19</ReferenceslastPage>
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