| Literature DB >> 22584751 |
Anna Szymańska1, Marcin Szymański, Kamal Morshed, Elżbieta Czekajska-Chehab, Małgorzata Szczerbo-Trojanowska.
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (NA) is a rare, vascular tumor affecting adolescent males. Due to aggressive local growth, skull base location and risk of profound hemorrhage, NA is a challenge for surgeons. Angiofibromas have been sporadically described in extanasopharyngeal locations. We review ten cases of extranasopharyngeal angiofibroma (ENA) and discuss the incidence, clinical presentation and management of this pathology. The group consisted of 4 males and 5 females aged 8-49. There were 7 patients with nasal angiofibroma, 1 patient with laryngeal angiofibroma, 1 patient with oral angiofibroma and another patient with infratemporal fossa tumor. In patients with nasal angiofibroma most common presenting symptoms were nasal obstruction and epistaxis. Patients with laryngeal angiofibroma suffered from mild dysphagia and patients with the infratemporal fossa tumor had painless cheek swelling. In four patients with nasal tumor computed tomography (CT) demonstrated mass with strong to intermediate contrast enhancement. In one patient with nasal tumor carotid angiography demonstrated pathological vessels without intensive tumor blush. Infratemporal fossa tumor showed intensive contrast enhancement on CT and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, and abundant vascularity on angiography. Laryngeal and oral angiofibroma required no radiological imaging. Three nasal tumors were evaluated before introduction of CT to clinical practice. All patients underwent surgery. No recurrences developed. ENAs differ significantly from NAs regarding clinical and radiological presentations. They lack typical clinical and radiological features as they develop in all age groups and in females, may be less vascularised, arise from various sites and produce a variety of symptoms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22584751 PMCID: PMC3560963 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-012-2041-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Fig. 1Computed tomography, coronal plane, shows homogenous tumor mass in the right nasal cavity
Fig. 2Magnetic resonance, saggital T1-weighted image after contrast administration. Large tumor in the infratemporal fossa and cheek shows intensive, inhomogenous contrast enhancement [25]
Detailed information of the presented cases
| No./ID/sex/age | Site/point of origin | Symptoms | Duration | Radiological findings | Treatment/approach |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1./JK/M/31 | Left nasal cavity/nasal septum | Nasal obstruction, rhinolalia | 3 months | – | Surgery, 1967 |
| 2./MM/M/42 | Right nasal cavity/nasal septum | Epistaxis, nasal obstruction, rhinolalia | 4 months | – | Surgery, 1969 |
| 3./EB/F/18 | Left nasal cavity/nasal septum | Nasal obstruction, epistaxis, rhinolalia, | 2 months | – | Surgery, 1970 |
| 4./TC/F/40 | Right nasal cavity, ethmoid sinus/nasal septum | Nasal obstruction, epistaxis, headache, mucopurulent discharge | 12 months | CT: tumor in the nasal fossa with bony erosion and invasion of the ethmoid sinus | Surgery, 1976 |
| 5./GJ/M/12 | Right nasal cavity/inferior turbinate | Nasal obstruction, epistaxis, mucopurulent discharge | 1 month | CT: tumor in the nasal vault DSA | Surgery, 1987 |
| 6./RB/M/15 | Right nasal cavity/nasal septum | Nasal obstruction, epistaxis | 3 months | CT: tumor in the nasal fossa | Surgery, 1998 |
| 7./UB/F/47 | Right nasal cavity, ethmoid sinus/nasal septum | Nasal obstruction | 4 months | CT: tumor in the nasal fossa | Surgery, 2003 |
| 8./PK/F/8 [ | Larynx/epiglottis | Dysphagia | 1 month | – | Surgery, 2004 |
| 9./MW/M/23 [ | Left infratemporal fossa, cheek/fossa pterygo-palatine | Swelling of the cheek | 12 months | CT/MR: tumor in the pterygo-palatine and infratemporal fossa, cheek. Arteriography: intensive blush | Surgery, 2006 |
| 10./JK/M/49 | Right palatine tonsil | Dysphagia | 1 month | – | Surgery, 2008 |
DSA Digital subtraction angiography
Fig. 3Histologic section of the infratemporal fossa tumor (H&E stain, magn. ×400) shows fibrous stroma with ectatic, thin-walled vascular channels [25]