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)

Aggressive osteoblastoma of the left calcaneus in 29-year-old Japanese woman is reported. Her initial symptom was heel pain while walking. This was a primary calcaneal tumor, initially diagnosed as a benign osteoblastoma. After a 5-year follow-up (from the initial curettage), there was local recurrence. The histologic findings of aggressive osteoblastoma were confirmed after right lower leg amputation. The recurrent tumor was mildly aggressive to the talocalcanean joint and the retrocalcaneal area, without distant metastasis. The characteristics of the primary and recurrent tumors were examined by the radiologic, histologic, and electron microscopic procedures. Although there are questions about aggressive osteoblastoma, the authors believe that there are osteoblastic tumors of borderline malignancy between benign osteoblastoma and low-grade osteosarcoma. The current case was an example compatible with an aggressive osteoblastoma with the proposed name of Dorfman classification Group 4.
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PMID:Aggressive osteoblastoma of the calcaneus. 842 27

Aggressive osteoblastoma is a rare bone-forming neoplasm composed of prominent epithelioid cells that demonstrate locally invasive growth with a high rate of recurrence but no metastatic potential. Clinical, radiographic and pathologic features of mandibular aggressive osteoblastoma in a 21-year-old African-American male and a 12-year-old Caucasian female are presented. Both tumors were resected with wide surgical margins and neither patient had adjuvant radiation or chemotherapy. The patients showed no evidence of local recurrence or distant spread either clinically or radiographically after two years of follow-up. These tumors were composed of solid sheets of pleomorphic epithelioid cells, eosinophilic amorphous osteoid with foci of calcification, which closely simulated amyloid. Differentiation of this tumor from histologically similar calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor and low-grade osteosarcoma proved difficult. Immunohistochemical study with osteocalcin confirmed the osteoblastic nature of these epithelioid cells.
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PMID:Aggressive osteoblastoma of the mandible closely simulating calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor. Report of two cases with unusual histopathologic findings. 1151 51

Osteoblastomas are rare bone-producing neoplasms that generally occur in the young and can be misdiagnosed as an osteosarcoma if correlation with clinical history, radiology, and histology is not carefully considered or if the several variants of osteoblastoma are not recognized. These variants lie on a morphologic spectrum between conventional osteoblastoma and osteosarcoma. Aggressive osteoblastoma is one such subtype. As the name implies, the histologic features of aggressive osteoblastoma may appear malignant, and its biologic behavior may separate it from conventional osteoblastoma. We report a case of aggressive osteoblastoma occurring in the femoral diaphysis of a 12-year-old girl; this osetoblastoma was dyssynchronous from the radiologic appearance and a diagnostic challenge. Cytogenetic evaluation of the neoplasm revealed a pseudodiploid clone with a balanced translocation involving chromosomes 4, 7, and 14. Using the premise that cytogenetics might be useful as a diagnostic tool for a more specific classification, we reviewed the literature in order to compare our findings with known chromosomal aberrations.
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PMID:Aggressive osteoblastoma: a case report involving a unique chromosomal aberration. 1861 33

Osteoblastoma is an uncommon, benign osteoblastic tumor accounting for <1% of all primary bone tumors. Aggressive osteoblastoma is a variant of osteoblastoma and is considered to be a borderline or intermediate osteoblastic tumor, first defined by Dorfman and Weiss in 1984. As a rare tumor, its true incidence and distribution are not clearly known. Treatment of osteoblastoma is complete surgical excision by either curettage or en bloc technique. Recurrence is seen in 10% to 15% of cases, and aggressive osteoblastoma are more likely to recur (<or=50%). Transformation to osteosarcoma has been reported, and this rare phenomenon is typically seen in the setting of multiple recurrences. Therefore, total en bloc spondylectomy constitutes the treatment of choice for recurrent aggressive osteoblastoma. This article reports a rare case of recurrent aggressive osteoblastoma of the thoracic spine, successfully treated by total en bloc spondylectomy. Treatment options for such a highly recurrent benign tumor are discussed.
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PMID:Total en bloc spondylectomy in the treatment of aggressive osteoblastoma of the thoracic spine. 1929 65

Aggressive osteoblastoma is a rare primary bone neoplasm with the potential for local invasion and recurrence. While the vertebrae or long bones are most commonly affected, few well-documented cases have been reported in the jaws. A 25-year-old man presented with a palatal mass of several months' duration. He reported the lesion had undergone gradual enlargement and, while generally asymptomatic, had recently become increasingly painful. An incisional biopsy was interpreted as "osteoblastic neoplasm" most suggestive of osteoblastoma. However, final diagnosis was deferred until the resection specimen could be evaluated. Following partial maxillectomy, histopathologic examination revealed a proliferation of large epithelioid cells with eccentric nuclei and prominent nucleoli associated with broad, irregular deposits of osteoid and trabeculae of bone. The lesional cells exhibited minimal pleomorphism with infrequent, normal-appearing mitotic figures and numerous osteoclast-like giant cells were observed within an associated loose fibrovascular stroma. Transformation of "blue bone" to more organized eosinophilic trabeculae of woven bone was noted at the periphery of the lesion and there was no evidence of invasion. A diagnosis of aggressive osteoblastoma was made. Previous reports of gnathic aggressive osteoblastoma are reviewed and the features that distinguish this process from conventional osteoblastoma or osteoblastoma-like osteosarcoma are presented.
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PMID:Aggressive osteoblastoma of the maxilla: a case report and review of the literature. 2118 15

Aggressive osteoblastoma is a rare osteoid tissue forming tumour commonly affecting the spine with predilection for the posterior elements. Calvarial involvement is extremely rare with only two reported cases in the literature. Due to its overlapping clinical, radiographic and histological features with ossifying fibroma, benign osteoblastoma and osteosarcoma, it is very difficult accurately to diagnose this lesion at an early stage. A rare case of an aggressive osteoblastoma of the squamous temporal bone in a young male is presented here which was misdiagnosed twice before reaching the final diagnosis by correlating clinical, radiographic and histopathological features.
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PMID:A rare case of an aggressive osteoblastoma of the squamous temporal bone: a unique presentation with literature review. 2474 61

Aggressive osteoblastoma (AO) is a rare variant of osteoblastoma characterized histologically by epithelioid osteoblasts and clinically by local recurrences if not excised completely. Aggressive osteoblastoma has been described in various unusual sites; however, based on our search of the literature, involvement of the tarsal navicular has not been previously described. Herein, we report what we believe to be the first case of aggressive osteoblastoma involving the tarsal navicular in a 35-year-old woman. The tumor showed osteoid surrounded by epithelioid cells along with numerous osteoclastic giant cells. Absence of necrosis, mitosis, and infiltration into the surrounding native bone helped rule out the possibility of low-grade osteosarcoma.
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PMID:Aggressive Osteoblastoma Involving the Navicular Bone of Foot: A Rare Tumor in a Unique Location. 3295 Mar 71