https://www.selleckchem.com/products/GDC-0879.html Finally, the patient succumbed to neutropenic fever following chemotherapy. Here, we present the exceptional case of a primary hepatic lymphoma with an unusual complication, a hepatogastric fistula, and try through the existing literature to show the difficulties involved in diagnosis and treatment.Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is the most common mesenchymal tumor in the digestive tract. Recurrences may occur even after radical resection; however, recurrence later than 10 years after surgery is rare. We report a case of GIST with recurrence of liver metastasis 25 years after surgery. A 56-year-old man complained of sudden epigastric pain and was transferred to the emergency department. He had undergone partial resection of the small intestine for leiomyosarcoma 25 years previously. Abdominal computed tomography showed multiple liver tumors with massive hemorrhage. Ultrasound-guided percutaneous biopsy was performed for the 15-mm hepatic tumor in segment 2. Pathological findings revealed proliferation of spindle-shaped atypical cells, and immunostaining for c-kit and CD34 was both positive; the patient was therefore diagnosed with GIST. He then underwent chemotherapy for 7 years but died of multiple organ failure due to GIST. Autopsy revealed GIST occupying the entire liver with peritoneal dissemination, and minute lung metastases that could not be identified by CT were also detected. This case is interesting in considering the recurrence of GIST, and we will report it together with the literature review. Although rare, external compression of the left main coronary artery (LMCA) by a pulmonary arterial aneurysm (PAA) as a consequence of pulmonary arterial hypertension causing stable angina pectoris is well described. However, acute myocardial infarction is extremely rare, particularly with a full array of electrocardiographic, biochemical, and echocardiographic features, as in this scenario. In this case, a