Eosinophilic perifolliculitis presenting as a painful cystic ovarian mass in a woman with fibromyalgia: a case report.

2006 
BACKGROUND: Autoimmune oophoritis is characterized by an ovarian lymphocytic infiltrate and is a rare finding in women with premature ovarian failure. Eosinophilic perifolliculitis is a possible variant of autoimmune oophoritis, of which the pathogenesis and natural history are largely unknown. CASE: A 45-year-old woman, gravida 2, para 2, status post total abdominal hysterectomy. vresented to her internist complaining of cyclic, throbbing, right lower quadrant pain. Her past medical history was significant for fibromyalgia. Pelvic ultrasound demonstrated a 2.3-cm, physiologic-appearing right ovarian cyst. Follow-up ultrasound showed a 2.2-cm, complex cyst on the right ovary that increased in size to 4.2 x 3.2 x 3.5 cm on repeat ultrasound 12 weeks later. Exploratory laparotomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy were performed. Pathologic evaluation of the ovaries revealed a 3x2 cm regressing corpus luteal cyst with numerous eosinophils, lymphocytes, macrophages and plasma cells, infiltrating the cyst wall. Serum antiovarian antibodies were positive. CONCLUSION: The patient's pathologic findings are consistent with the rare entity of eosinophilic perifolliculitis. The patient's history offibromyalgia is of particular interest given that both of these diseases may have an autoimmune etiology. Eosinophilic perifolliculitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of pre-menopausal and perimenopausal women with pelvic pain and persistent cystic ovarian enlargement.
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