Capillary hemangioma is a common benign tumor in children. Its presence in the kidney is rare, and there have been only case reports in the English literature. Herein, we report a special case of capillary hemangioma located in the renal hilum, which was suspected to be a paraganglioma.
A 44-year-old woman had an irregular mass in the right hilar region. She had a history of hypertension for 3 years, and her 24-hour urinary norepinephrine was slightly high (41.53 µg, normal range: 16.69-40.65 µg). Abdominal MRI revealed a mass in the renal hilum measuring approximately 4.8×4.0×3.2 cm, slightly low signal intensity on T1WI, and very high signal intensity on both T2WI and DWI. The multiphase enhanced scan showed that the tumor had obvious enhancement with a central hypointense area. Therefore, paraganglioma was initially diagnosed. Phenoxybenzamine was administered over the next 2 weeks. She performed laparoscopic right hilar area tumor resection, and the kidney was preserved. Unexpectedly, the final pathology report was capillary hemangioma.
Capillary hemangioma in the renal hilum is extremely rare. Surgery is the first choice to reduce the risk of compression symptoms and to rule out malignancy with respect to an undefined growing retroperitoneal mass. In addition, renal-sparing surgery should be preferred.