A 54-year-old male with a past medical history of atrial flutter and alcohol use disorder presents with an umbilical wound that has been bothering him for approximately six months. There is no history of trauma, prior infection, or umbilical surgery. There is intermittent mild pain and irritation that occurs randomly. No drainage or bleeding. He admits to picking at the wound regularly. He denies fever, chills, nausea, generalized abdominal pain, diarrhea, constipation, dysuria, and hematuria. The patient drinks four or more alcoholic beverages daily and has a long-standing history of tobacco use.
Vitals: BP 105/73; HR 70; RR 16; SpO2 97% on room air; Temp 36.1°C Constitutional: Appears stated age, resting comfortably, well-appearing. Abdominal: Soft, flat, non-tender. Skin: Umbilical wound characterized by a peripheral eschar and a central area of hyperpigmented and crusted tissue overlying an area of whiteish moist tissue that was uncovered by gentle cleansing. No surrounding erythema and no areas of fluctuance. No active drainage or malodor. None available. Sister Mary Joseph (SMJ) nodule is a rare cutaneous metastasis of gastrointestinal or genitourinary primary malignancies to the umbilicus [1,3]. They are typically firm, painful, indurated, and irregularly shaped, with sizes typically less than 2 cm [1]. They can be ulcerated or necrotic with variable presence of discharge ranging from purulent to serous or serosanguinous [1]. Sister Mary Joseph nodules typically arise late in disease and portend a poor prognosis [1]. Most primary malignancies are adenocarcinomas (75%), and pancreatic cancers represent approximately 9% of umbilical metastases [1]. Mean survival of patients with SMJ nodules is less than 12 months, and less than three in those with pancreatic primaries [1]. Prognosis is slightly less bleak if the SMJ nodule is the only metastatic site [1]. Sister May Joseph Dempsey was a nun and surgical assistant to Dr. William Mayo, the surgeon who developed the approach to umbilical hernia repair and the first to identify the connection between abdominopelvic cancers and umbilical nodules [2,3]. Abdominal CT imaging. Our patient was discharged on the initial visit with wound care instructions. He returned to the Emergency Department two months later and was admitted for atrial flutter with rapid ventricular response and acute on chronic congestive heart failure. During that visit, the patient had a CT chest/abdomen/pelvis that demonstrated likely a pancreatic tail adenocarcinoma with metastasis to the peritoneal and abdominal walls. The patient declined any further intervention.Take-Home Points
Copyright
Images and cases from the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) Clinical Images Exhibit at the 2021 SAEM Annual Meeting | Copyrighted by SAEM 2021 – all rights reserved. View other cases from this Clinical Image Series on ALiEM.
Gabrielle Ransford, MD
Department of Emergency Medicine
Eastern Virginia Medical School
Latest posts by Gabrielle Ransford, MD (see all)
- SAEM Clinical Images Series: An Ominous Umbilical Lesion - January 9, 2023
Charles Graffeo, MD, ABEM-UHM
Assistant Residency Director
Department of Emergency Medicine
Eastern Virginia Medical School
Latest posts by Charles Graffeo, MD, ABEM-UHM (see all)
- SAEM Clinical Images Series: An Ominous Umbilical Lesion - January 9, 2023
Barry Knapp, MD, FACEP, RDMS
Department of Emergency Medicine
Eastern Virginia Medical School
Latest posts by Barry Knapp, MD, FACEP, RDMS (see all)
- SAEM Clinical Images Series: An Ominous Umbilical Lesion - January 9, 2023