Giant condiloma of Bushke–Löwenstein: a clinical case

2020 
Giant condyloma Buschke-Levenshtein is a large, exophytic, slow-growing, benign, warty lesion of the anogenital region. The cause of this pathology is infection with the human papillomavirus, mainly of the 6th or 11th type. The pathogenesis of giant genital warts is not well understood, and it is often considered an intermediate link between acute warts and squamous cell carcinoma. The frequency of occurrence in the general population is about 0.1%, which indicates the rarity of this pathology. The giant condyloma Buschke-Lowenstein was first described by the authors Buschke and Lowenstein in 1925. Currently, the literature contains descriptions of mostly single observations of patients with this pathology. The main method of treatment for giant condyloma Buschke-Levenshtein is surgical, the task of which is a wide excision of the tumor within healthy tissues. We present a clinical observation of a patient with a giant condyloma Buschke-Levenshtein. a 36-year-old patient underwent surgical treatment - removal of a large perineal tumor. At the time of surgery, the size of the tumor was about 25 × 15 cm. The patient underwent surgical treatment without complications, healing by primary intention. Within six months after the operation, no recurrence of the disease was detected. Thus, surgical treatment of such tumors is the only method that can count on the patient being cured.
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