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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of low-grade central
osteosarcoma
of the skull in a 36-year-old male is described. A 10cm mass of the left temporo-occipital bone, which was incidentally found 6 years previously on the occasion of a head trauma, was osteolytic and osteoplastic, affecting soft tissues and the subdural space. The patient was treated with intralesional curettage. Histologically, the tumor was characterized by spindle cell proliferation with woven and lamellar bone formation, resembling fibrous dysplasia, parosteal
osteosarcoma
, low-grade fibrosarcoma, or desmoplastic
fibroma
. The spindle cells were fairly uniform with mild atypia and low-mitotic activity (3 per 50 high power fields), and cellularity varied from low to high. Clinicians and pathologists should be aware of this type of low-grade
osteosarcoma
of the skull and distinguish it from its mimics, including fibrous dysplasia, parosteal
osteosarcoma
, and low-grade fibrosarcoma. Careful microscopic correlation with radiographic findings is the clue to the correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:Low-grade central osteosarcoma of the skull. 1590 Nov 34
The clinical, radiographic and histopathologic features of seven cases of osteoblastoma of the jaw bones were analyzed. The mandible was involved in six cases and a periosteal presentation of the tumor was noted in three cases. Six tumors were symptomatic with pain being the common presentation. The radiographic appearance of the intraosseous tumors varied from well-defined radiolucencies to poorly-defined mixed lesions. A small periosteal tumor was undetectable radiographically. Histopathologically, the tumors exhibited variation in woven bone formation, osteoblastic rimming, lesional maturation as well as interaction of the tumor with surrounding host tissue. Intraosseous tumors were managed with aggressive surgical curettage and periosteal tumors were resected and the underlying bone was curetted down to normal host bone. Follow-up of cases ranged from 2 years to 18 years with no recorded recurrences. Gnathic osteoblastomas offer a unique diagnostic challenge as they resemble other tumors of the jaws including the cementoblastoma, cemento-ossifying
fibroma
, cemento-osseous dysplasia and most importantly the gnathic
osteosarcoma
. We stress on the need to correlate the histopathologic findings with clinical and radiographic features to reach an accurate diagnosis.
...
PMID:Gnathic osteoblastoma: clinicopathologic review of seven cases with long-term follow-up. 1612 54
Osteolytic lesions are frequently encountered in clinical practice. Radionuclide bone scans with technetium-99m-labeled diphosphonates are often performed in the evaluation of both solitary and multiple osteolytic lesions. In this pictorial review, we critically evaluate the current role of bone scan in common osteolytic tumors including aneurysmal bone cyst, simple bone cyst, fibrous dysplasia, nonossifying
fibroma
, giant cell tumor, eosinophilic granuloma, enchondroma, chondrosarcoma,
osteosarcoma
, Ewing sarcoma, myeloma, and metastases. The merits and limitations of bone scanning are emphasized.
...
PMID:Bone scintigraphy in common tumors with osteolytic components. 1616 37
Desmoplastic fibroma is a very rare primary tumor of bone, closely related to aggressive fibromatosis of soft tissue. Although considered a benign lesion, it can be very aggressive locally and has a high rate of local recurrence after incomplete surgical excision. Radiologically, the lesion shows no distinctive features, often simulating
osteosarcoma
, fibrous dysplasia, or fibrosarcoma. Rib involvement by desmoplastic
fibroma
is extremely rare. We present two cases of desmoplastic
fibroma
involving this unusual location with lytic costal lesion and chest wall extension. Histological examination after surgical resection revealed that the tumor consisted of spindle cells with small, elongated nuclei in a background of numerous collagen fibers and infiltrating lamellar bone. There was no evidence of nuclear atypia, mitotic activity, or necrosis. We also discuss histological differential diagnosis as well as clinical features and the radiological and pathologic findings of this rare disease. Recognition of this entity is important to ensure proper surgical treatment.
...
PMID:[Desmoplastic fibroma of the rib: two case reports]. 1649 94
An aged mongrel dog was admitted for hemimandibulectomy as treatment for a mandibular mass that had been diagnosed as
osteosarcoma
. The fibro-osseous mass that surrounded the first molar tooth and replaced alveolar and cortical bone was reclassified as ossifying
fibroma
on the basis of anatomic location and histologic features. The tumor was composed of isomorphic fusiform cells with few mitotic figures. Tumoral stroma contained trabeculae of woven bone that were bordered by a single layer of osteoblasts. Excision was deemed complete with no evidence of extension or metastasis by computed tomography of the skull or thoracic and abdominal radiography. The dog was reportedly healthy 6 months after initial presentation. Though far less common than
osteosarcoma
as a primary canine bone tumor, ossifying
fibroma
should be included in the differential diagnosis for fibro-osseous proliferations, especially those of the jaw. Although benign, en bloc excision may be necessary for surgical cure.
...
PMID:Mandibular ossifying fibroma in a dog. 1842 35
Many extraocular masses involving the pediatric orbit have an osseous origin. The most common is the dermoid inclusion cyst; these cystic lesions may contain lipid and are most often found near the zygomaticofrontal suture, adjacent to an indolent-appearing erosion of bone. Some primary bone lesions may involve the orbit, producing a lytic or dense lesion with enlargement of the bone; these lesions include fibrous dysplasia, juvenile ossifying
fibroma
, and
osteosarcoma
. Fibrous dysplasia tends to produce a mass of ground-glass appearance with longitudinal osseous expansion, whereas juvenile ossifying
fibroma
is likely to produce a mixed lytic and sclerotic lesion and focal osseous enlargement.
Osteosarcoma
causes marked bone destruction and variable osteoid production. Langerhans cell histiocytosis, an idiopathic reticuloendothelial proliferative disorder, tends to involve the bones of the skull, especially the lateral orbital roof; it produces lytic destruction of bone with a sclerotic rim and a large intraorbital soft-tissue mass. Granulocytic sarcoma is a solid tumor that may occur in children with myelogenous leukemia. These tumors tend to arise in the subperiosteum of the lateral orbital wall, although they usually do not disrupt the bone. Finally, the orbit is a common site for bone metastases from neuroblastoma, which cause aggressive periosteal reaction in the orbital roof or lateral wall. The last three conditions are often bilateral. At imaging evaluation, osseous lesions may appear similar to each other and to nonosseous masses of the orbit. Knowledge of the pathologic features of these tumors and how these features are reflected in their imaging appearances may help radiologists differentiate them.
...
PMID:From the Archives of the AFIP. Pediatric orbit tumors and tumorlike lesions: osseous lesions of the orbit. 1863 37
The diagnosis of giant cell-rich lesions of bone is often problematic even for the experienced pathologist. The diagnostic key lies in multinucleated osteoclast-like giant cells and a mononuclear stroma. From the histological picture alone it is often difficult to distinguish between individual entities such as conventional giant-cell tumor of bone, non-ossifying
fibroma
, giant-cell tumor in hyperparathyroidism or an aneurysmal bone cyst. Furthermore, these lesions can be confused with malignant bone tumors such as giant cell-rich
osteosarcoma
. X-ray is important for a correct diagnosis since some of these tumors show a typical anatomic location, while age of the patient is also an important factor. In most cases diagnosis is made on the basis of intraoperative frozen-section, but even in this setting, due to the poor quality of the material, it is very difficult to make a correct diagnosis of giant cell-rich lesions without X-ray and clinical data.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis of giant cell-rich lesions of bone]. 1883 22
Soft-tissue and osseous tumors of the hand in children differ considerably from those of adults, not only in frequency but also in terms of anatomic distribution, histologic type and prognosis. Malignant tumors are rare in children, the most common being rhabdomyosarcoma for soft-tissue tumors, and
osteosarcoma
and Ewing sarcoma for osseous tumors. Hemangioma is the most common soft-tissue tumor in infancy and childhood. Other vascular abnormalities are capillary malformation, venous malformation. Many other benign soft-tissue and cutaneous tumors can be seen (ganglion cyst, naevus,
fibroma
...). The surgeon must know the signs, evolution and the treatment of these tumors.
...
PMID:[Children's tumors of the hand]. 1884 96
This article provides a review of the MR imaging features of the major primary malignant and benign bone tumors and tumorlike conditions encountered in the pediatric population. Malignant tumors discussed include
osteosarcoma
, Ewing sarcoma, chondrosarcoma, lymphoma, and malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Benign lesions discussed include simple bone cysts, aneurysmal bone cysts, giant cell tumor, osteochondroma, enchondroma, chondroblastoma, osteoid osteoma, osteoblastoma, nonossifying
fibroma
, fibrous dysplasia, osteofibrous dysplasia, hemangioma, and histiocytosis. The use of MR imaging in the diagnosis of these lesions is discussed, and the text is enhanced with imaging examples of the lesions.
...
PMID:MR imaging of primary bone tumors and tumor-like conditions in children. 1952 97
Parosteal osteosarcoma and low-grade central
osteosarcoma
are two types of low-grade
osteosarcoma
that show similar clinical behaviors, histological features, and genetic background (ie, amplified sequences of 12q13-15, including MDM2 and CDK4). Low-grade
osteosarcoma
is often confused with benign lesions, and ancillary techniques to enhance diagnostic accuracy have been awaited. This study explores the use of MDM2 and CDK4 immunohistochemistry for the histological diagnosis of low-grade
osteosarcoma
. We studied 23 cases of low-grade
osteosarcoma
from 21 patients (parosteal
osteosarcoma
(n=14), low-grade central
osteosarcoma
(n=9)) and 40 cases of benign histological mimics (myositis ossificans (n=11), fibrous dysplasia (n=14), osteochondroma (n=6), desmoplastic
fibroma
(n=1), florid reactive periostitis (n=4), Nora's lesion (n=3), and turret exostosis (n=1)). Low-grade
osteosarcoma
labeled for MDM2 in 16 cases (70%) and for CDK4 in 20 cases (87%). All low-grade osteosarcomas expressed one or both markers (100%), with 13 cases (57%) expressing both. Staining pattern was diffuse in most cases, and the majority expressed moderate or strong intensity for either antibody. MDM2/CDK4 immunostaining was shown irrespective of low-grade
osteosarcoma
histological subtype. In contrast, only 1 Nora's lesion out of the 40 miscellaneous benign processes showed immunoreactivity for MDM2 or CDK4. The combination of these two markers thus shows 100% sensitivity and 97.5% specificity for the diagnosis of low-grade
osteosarcoma
. MDM2 and CDK4 immunostains therefore reliably distinguish low-grade
osteosarcoma
from benign histological mimics, and their combination may serve as a useful adjunct in this difficult differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of MDM2 and CDK4 distinguishes low-grade osteosarcoma from benign mimics. 2060 38
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