Literature DB >> 8200895

Skeletal-extraskeletal angiomatosis. A clinicopathological study of fourteen patients and nosologic considerations.

K Devaney1, T N Vinh, D E Sweet.   

Abstract

We reviewed the consultation files of the ARmed Forces Institute of Pathology for 1951 through 1989 and identified fourteen patients who had had skeletal-extraskeletal angiomatosis. Skeletal-extraskeletal angiomatosis was defined as a benign vascular proliferation involving the medullary cavity of bone and at least one other type of tissue. The age of the patients at the time of initial biopsy ranged from nine months to sixty-nine years (average, twenty-two years; median, ten years). Ten of the patients were male and four were female. The presenting signs and symptoms were highly variable; they included pain (four patients), a mass noted at birth (three patients), a painless mass that developed after birth (two patients), both pain and a mass (one patient), a localized deformity of the thoracic spine (one patient), and anemia associated with chronic bleeding of the gastrointestinal tract (one patient); in this last patient, skeletal lesions subsequently were found and biopsied. Skeletal-extraskeletal angiomatosis was an incidental finding in the remaining two patients. Multiple bones were involved in thirteen of the fourteen patients. Histologically, three patterns of lesion could be identified: cavernous lymphangioma (six patients), cavernous hemangioma (six patients), and arteriovenous hemangioma (two patients). Five of the patients died (three of sepsis associated with persistent lesions of angiomatosis and two of unrelated causes); eight of the patients survived but had residual disease, and one survived and had no evidence of residual disease.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8200895     DOI: 10.2106/00004623-199406000-00012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


  6 in total

1.  Importance of MRI in the diagnosis of vertebral involvement in generalized cystic lymphangiomatosis.

Authors:  Pooja Renjen; Arzu Kovanlikaya; Navneet Narula; Paula W Brill
Journal:  Skeletal Radiol       Date:  2014-06-21       Impact factor: 2.199

2.  Retrospective French nationwide survey of childhood aggressive vascular anomalies of bone, 1988-2009.

Authors:  Sébastien Héritier; Martine Le Merrer; Francis Jaubert; Michèle Bigorre; Marion Gillibert-Yvert; Benoit de Courtivron; Makram Ziade; Yves Bertrand; Christian Carrie; Pascal Chastagner; Cécile Bost-Bru; Jean-Claude Léonard; Marie Ouache; Liliane Boccon-Gibod; Pierre Mary; Jacques de Blic; Isabelle Pin; Daniel Wendling; Yann Revillon; Véronique Houdoin; Véronique Forin; Hubert Ducou Lepointe; Jane Languepin; Jeanne Wagnon; Ralph Epaud; Brigitte Fauroux; Jean Donadieu
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2010-02-03       Impact factor: 4.123

Review 3.  Cystic angiomatosis, a heterogeneous condition: Four new cases and a literature review.

Authors:  Aurélie Najm; Elise Soltner-Neel; Benoît Le Goff; Pascale Guillot; Yves Maugars; Jean-Marie Berthelot
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 1.889

4.  Systemic Cystic Angiomatosis Mimicking Metastatic Cancer: A Case Report and Review of the Literature.

Authors:  Vivek Kumar; Trishala Meghal; Yanyu Helen Sun; Yiwu Huang
Journal:  Case Rep Med       Date:  2017-09-11

5.  Surgical treatment of severe thoracic kyphosis and neurological deficit in a patient with Gorham-Stout syndrome: A case report and literature review.

Authors:  Hanwen Zhang; Chaofan Han; Daming Pang; Hai Yong; Jincai Yang; Peng Yin; Lijin Zhou
Journal:  Front Surg       Date:  2022-08-08

6.  Disseminated Skeletal Angiomatosis Initially Misdiagnosed As Metastatic Tumor: A Case Report.

Authors:  Fariba Binesh; Kazem Aghili; Marjan Hakiminia; Mohammad Reza Vahidfar; Roghayeh Masumi
Journal:  Iran J Pathol       Date:  2017-01-02
  6 in total

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