Colon, Mucosal ganglioneuroma

Details
Disease Category
Gender
Age
59 years
Organ System/Discipline
Diagnosis
Mucosal ganglioneuroma
Clinical History

Colon lesion.

Case Discussion

Ganglioneuromas are proliferations of neural gangion cells that occur either as sporadic solitary lesions or as multiple/diffuse lesions (ganglioneuromatosis). They can be associated with one of several genetic syndromes. Diffuse lesions may present as exophytic polyps (‘ganglioneuromatous polyposis’; associated with FAP, Cowden syndrome, tuberous sclerosis, juvenile polyposis) or poorly demarcated transmural proliferations (‘ganglioneuromatosis’; associated with MEN IIb - RET mutations and neurofibromatosis type 1 - NF1 mutations).

Solitary lesions are usually asymptomatic, have no gender predilection, and are usually found in the left side of the colon, with a mean patient age of approximately 50 years.

Diffuse lesions present with diverse GI symptoms such as crampy abdominal pain, constipation, projectile vomiting, diarrhea and/or difficulty feeding. The mean patient age is usually less than 35 years.

The major differential is neurofibroma, in which there is a lack of ganglion cells, which are present in ganglioneuromas (NSE, synaptophysin positive). Histologically, ganglioneuromas distend the lamina and show sheets of spindle cells within a fibrillary matrix and irregular nests and groups of ganglion cells. The diffuse lesions may extend into all layers of the bowel wall, including mesentery.

Image Contributors
Papp, S., Latta, E.

Cite

Papp, S., Latta, E. Colon, Mucosal ganglioneuroma. Digital Laboratory Medicine Library, Dept of Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto. Published . Accessed December 17, 2025. https://dev.dlml.cflabs.ca/image/colon-mucosal-ganglioneuroma-lmp65461