Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An 18 1/2-year-old castrated male donkey with progressively worsening right forelimb lameness presented with a mass on the distal dorsal aspect of its P3 bone. Grossly, the firm, gritty mass was infiltrative, disrupted the contours of the overlying hoof wall, and had mottled and cavitated areas on cut surface. Histologically, the growth was composed of densely cellular sheets of mildly pleomorphic mesenchymal cells forming irregularly shaped islands of poorly mineralized osteoid. The neoplastic mass had patchy areas of necrosis. The diagnostic possibilities considered for this donkey's mass include osteosarcoma, osteoma, ossifying fibroma, and fibrous dysplasia. Careful consideration of the gross and histological characteristics of this donkey's mass support a diagnosis of osteosarcoma.
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PMID:Pedal osteosarcoma in a donkey. 975 46

The use of fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in the initial evaluation of pediatric bone and soft tissue tumors is controversial, especially for those patients being considered for histiogenetic-specific therapeutic protocols, e.g., the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group, the Pediatric Oncology Group. We retrospectively reviewed 33 consecutive FNAB specimens (28 primary tumors, 5 metastases) from 32 pediatric patients (< or = 19 yr of age), none of whom had a previously established tumor diagnosis. In one patient, FNAB of the primary tumor and a presumed axillary metastasis were obtained concomitantly. The cytomorphologic analysis included osteosarcoma, eight patients; rhabdomyosarcoma, five; neuroblastoma, five; Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor, four; Langerhans' cell histiocytosis, three; and one each synovial sarcoma, undifferentiated sarcoma, infantile myofibromatosis, fibroma, chondroblastoma, chondromyxoid fibroma, and desmoplastic small round-cell tumor. Ancillary studies, e.g., immunocytochemical analysis, were used in 13 cases. Cytogenetic analysis helped to confirm one Ewing's sarcoma [t (11;22) (q24;q12)] and one synovial sarcoma [t(X;18) (p11;q11)]. With adequate FNAB specimens, a histogenetic-specific diagnosis was rendered in 27 (93%) of 29 cases, and all were correctly recognized as either benign or malignant. One case each of Langerhans' cell histiocytosis, chondroblastoma, and infantile myofibromatosis yielded unsatisfactory specimens. Fibroma and desmoplastic small round-cell tumor were initially misclassified as nodular fasciitis and rhabdomyosarcoma, respectively. Of 18 patients clinically eligible for histogenetic-specific therapy protocols, an accurate diagnosis was obtained in 17 patients. With a multidisciplinary approach and judicious use of ancillary studies, FNAB represents a highly accurate and cost-effective technique for the diagnosis of pediatric bone and soft tissue tumors, especially sarcomas, and should be considered as a viable diagnostic technique for pediatric therapeutic protocols.
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PMID:The role of fine-needle aspiration biopsy in the initial diagnosis of pediatric bone and soft tissue tumors: an institutional experience. 979 16

A 19-year-old man presented with a chondromyxoid fibroma of the distal phalanx of the great toe that was originally diagnosed as osteosarcoma rather than "dedifferentiated" chondrosarcoma. Radiographs showed a large, expansive, and calcified tumor of the distal phalanx. Although the tumor had the architectural and matrix patterns of a chondromyxoid fibroma, high-power examination demonstrated that the lesion had such severe nuclear pleomorphism that it was mistaken for high-grade sarcoma. The purpose of this report is to present the criteria used to differentiate a benign pseudoanaplastic chondromyxoid fibroma from chondrogenic high-grade sarcomas.
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PMID:Pseudoanaplastic chondromyxoid fibroma. 984 44

Tumors of the musculoskeletal system are rare in horses; however, they must be taken seriously. Diagnosis requires observation of clinical signs, radiographic findings, and histological examination. Veterinarians must realize prognosis is not favorable for most tumors; however, some of these tumors can be treated or at least ameliorated. Tumors discussed in this article include: osteoma and osteosarcoma; osteoblastoma; chondrosarcoma; fibroma and fibrosarcoma; plasma cell myeloma; synovioma; rhabdomyosarcoma and tumors metastatic to the musculoskeletal system.
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PMID:Musculoskeletal system neoplasia. 989 23

Purpose of this review is to demonstrate typical X-ray, CT and MR morphology of primary bone tumors and "tumor-like lesions" of the shoulder in correlation with histopathology. 711 primary bone tumors of the shoulder and proximal humerus were studied. 602 were localized in the humerus, 90 in the scapula and 19 in the clavicula. The most frequent benign tumors were osteochondromas (n = 143), simple bone cysts (n = 115), enchondromas (n = 75) and aneurysmal bone cysts (n = 50). Fibrous dysplasia (n = 25), chondroblastoma (n = 15), osteoid osteoma (n = 13), giant cell tumors (n = 12) and non ossifying fibroma (n = 11) were less frequent. The most frequent malignant bone tumors were osteosarcoma (n = 72), chondrosarcoma (n = 52) and Ewing's sarcoma (n = 46). Focal plasmocytoma (n = 20) and lymphoma (n = 10) were less frequent. The average age of the patients was 31.5 years. Some of these tumors were typically located in the shoulder, i.e. simple bone cysts and chondroblastoma. In summary the shoulder was a rather infrequent site of primary bone tumors, but since most of these tumors were benign, the radiologist should be aware of the differential diagnosis to guide therapy.
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PMID:[Primary bone tumors and "tumor-like lesions" of the shoulder. Their histopathology and imaging]. 1037 Apr 17

Osteosarcoma (OS) occurs most often in the long bones. OS of the jaws has clinical and biologic aspects different from those of the long bones. They tend to occur at an older mean age, pain and swelling are more typical, and prognosis is more favorable. Nearly all OS shows a very prominent central intramedullary bone component. Only rarely are juxtacortical (peripheral) OS located in the jaws. There are 2 main types of juxtacortical OS, periosteal and parosteal. We present 2 cases of OS of the jaws where the clinical, radiologic, and histologic findings pointed to a diagnosis of periosteal OS. Both patients presented, in fact, with lesions located superficially on the bone surface with no marrow involvement. Both tumors were characterized by the presence of a moderately differentiated chondroblastic tumor with foci of osteoid and bone formation. Periosteal OS should be differentiated microscopically from periosteal chondrosarcoma, intramedullary OS with periosteal extension, high-grade surface OS, and parosteal OS. The clinical differential diagnosis was done, in these cases, for epulis, gingival tumors, peripheral odontogenic fibroma, peripheral ossifying fibroma, pyogenic granuloma, peripheral giant cell granuloma, and mesenchymal malignant tumors.
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PMID:Periosteal osteosarcoma of the jaws: report of 2 cases. 1071 25

A case of myositis ossificans in 15-year old boy that occurred as a complication of the recurrent synovia hemangioma of the left knee was presented. The alteration was diagnosed as: osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma and chondromyxoid fibroma by the pathologists from other institutions. The diagnosis of myositis ossificans was established using numerous histochemical and immunochemical methods (PAS, PAS diastasis, Alcian blue, Masson trichrom, von Kossa, Azur A, Toluidin blue, Goldner, method by Peris, Citokeratin, S-100, NSE and Vimentin). The presence of zonal phenomenon, as the one observed in the presented case, is one of the most significant criteria for differentiation of myositis ossificans from osteosarcoma.
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PMID:[Myositis ossificans in recurrent synovial hemangioma of the knee]. 1083 65

Patients with the inherited, bilateral form of retinoblastoma have an increased incidence of osteogenic sarcoma such that the mortality from the secondary tumor exceeds that of the initial bilateral retinoblastoma. We report a 29-year-old male survivor of bilateral retinoblastomas originally diagnosed at 8 months of age, whose treatment eventually included bilateral enucleation, bilateral orbital radiation, and systemic chemotherapy. At age 26, a tumor removed from his right maxillary sinus was diagnosed as fibroma. At age 29, he developed an inferior orbital mass that extended into the right maxillary sinus. A biopsy and comparison with the previous maxillary sinus mass revealed both lesions to be leiomyosarcoma. Both light and electron microscopy supported the diagnosis. The patient has survived treatment with orbital exenteration and maxillectomy combined with postoperative radiation to the right orbital-maxillary area. This appears to be the fourth case of leiomyosarcoma in the third decade of life in a male patient with a previously irradiated orbit after enucleation for bilateral retinoblastoma. Leiomyosarcoma appears to be another orbital tumor associated with bilateral retinoblastoma.
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PMID:Orbital leiomyosarcoma after retinoblastoma. 1092 85

A case of a 9-year-old boy with fibrocartilaginous mesenchymoma located in the distal femur is presented. Fibrocartilaginous mesenchymoma is a rare tumor. There have been 17 cases reported since 1984. The presenting complaint was pain and local discomfort. Radiological examination showed lytic and sclerotic lesions located in the distal femur. Magnetic resonance imaging showed that there was no soft tissue expansion. Differential diagnosis included fibrocartilaginous dysplasia, dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma, desmoplastic fibroma, fibrosarcoma and low-grade osteosarcoma. The diagnosis of the tumor in a state hospital would not have been possible. Wide resection of the tumor and resection arthrodesis with an intramedullary nail has yielded good results. The patient has been disease free for 4 years. Pathological diagnosis of this very rare tumor may be challenging; the treatment should be wide resection of the tumor.
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PMID:Fibrocartilaginous mesenchymoma of the distal femur: case report and literature review. 1156 20

Chest wall hamartoma is a rare non-neoplastic benign lesion occurring in the neonatal period with particular clinical, radiological and pathological features. Histologically, it is composed of a mixture of bone trabeculae with spindle-cell stroma, chondroblast-like cells, and mature and immature hyaline cartilage. Aneurysmal bone cyst is a benign lesion that may arise secondary to several bone processes, such as giant cell tumor, chondrosarcoma, non-ossifying fibroma or osteosarcoma. We present two new cases of chest wall hamartoma with secondary aneurysmatic bone cyst formation studied with histological and immunocytochemical methods.
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PMID:Chest wall hamartoma. Report of two cases with secondary aneurysmal bone cysts. 1179 32


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