Cases reported "Nose Neoplasms"

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1/319. Mixed-type liposarcoma of the oral cavity: a case with unusual features and a long survival.

    A case of mixed-type liposarcoma, which showed unusual dedifferentiation in the recurrence, is reported. The rapidly growing mass in the palate of a 60-year-old Japanese woman first revealed a combination of myxoid liposarcoma with features resembling storiform malignant fibrous histiocytoma. The recurrent neoplasm, showing an abrupt transition between myxoid and non-lipogenic parts, partially reverted to sclerosing well-differentiated liposarcoma. The patient died 10.1 years after the first operation.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cavity, oral cavity
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2/319. Metastatic testicular teratoma of the nasal cavity: a rare cause of severe intractable epistaxis.

    Malignant neoplasms of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses are uncommon. choriocarcinoma is a highly malignant germ cell tumour occurring in the reproductive organs. Metastasis may be principally by the lymphatic route as in other germ cell tumours but choriocarcinoma is also known to spread haematogenously. We present a rare case of metastatic choriocarcinoma to the nasal cavity from testicular teratoma presenting with intractable epistaxis in a 32-year-old Caucasian male, who ultimately succumbed to this disease.
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ranking = 1.4571615788418
keywords = cavity
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3/319. Huge hamartoma with inverted papilloma in the nasal cavity.

    We report clinical experience in managing a 46-year-old Japanese man with long-standing nasal obstruction resulting from a huge left nasal mass. Computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and biopsy were used to make a provisional diagnosis of inverted papilloma. The mass was resected via a frontal approach combined with rhinotomy. Histopathologic examination of the resected specimen was consistent with a hamartoma that included an inverted papilloma on a portion of its surface. In addition to being rare tumors in the nasal cavity, we believe that our patient's tumor the largest nasal hamartoma ever reported.
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ranking = 1.2143013157015
keywords = cavity
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4/319. A case of large cell calcifying sertoli cell tumor in a child with a history of nasal myxoid tumor in infancy.

    A case of an 8-year-old Japanese boy with a testicular large cell calcifying sertoli cell tumor (LCCSCT) is presented. This report appears to be the first Japanese case of LCCSCT. The patient presented with left testicular swelling and gynecomastia. His family history was not contributory; however, his past history was remarkable for a benign myxoid tumor in the nasal cavity, which was removed at the age of 2 months. After removal of the testicular tumor, the gynecomastia disappeared gradually and no recurrence or metastasis developed during a 15 month follow-up period. Although the tumor was initially interpreted as a leydig cell tumor, a review of the slides after the patient's past history of nasal myxoid tumor was revealed led us to the diagnosis of LCCSCT. An accurate diagnosis of LCCSCT is crucial because this tumor is occasionally associated with carney complex, which can comprise various pathological conditions, including cardiac myxoma, that may be life-threatening. myxoma of carney complex has been described to occur in the heart, skin, oral cavity and breast in a wide age range, but there have been no reports referring to nasal myxoid tumor associated with carney complex.
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ranking = 0.49286026314029
keywords = cavity, oral cavity
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5/319. Metastasis of a renal cell carcinoma to the nose and paranasal sinuses.

    We present a case of a metastasis of a renal cell carcinoma to the nose and paranasal sinuses. A 66 year old male patient developed a mass in his left nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses, five years after he underwent a left sided nefrectomy for a renal cell carcinoma. The histopathologic examination of the nasal mass showed metastasis of a renal cell carcinoma. A craniofacial resection was performed followed by radiotherapy.
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ranking = 0.24286026314029
keywords = cavity
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6/319. CT and MRI of congenital sinonasal ossifying fibroma.

    We report a 9-year-old boy with a sinonasal ossifying fibroma, probably congenital, with atypical findings on CT and MRI. CT revealed a soft-tissue density mass in the sphenoethmoidal sinuses, nasal cavity and right maxillary sinus with a few foci of calcification and with remodelling and destruction of the adjacent facial bones. MRI showed high signal on T2- and intermediate signal on T1-weighted images. A thin, partly enhancing outer shell and some nonenhancing septa were visible on contrast-enhanced images. MRI also showed the tumour to extend into the anterior cranial fossa. Subtotal removal was performed. We compare our findings with reports in the literature and discuss the differences from fibrous dysplasia.
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ranking = 0.24286026314029
keywords = cavity
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7/319. Mucocutaneous angiomyolipoma. A report of 2 cases arising in the nasal cavity.

    OBJECTIVE: angiomyolipoma (AML) is a distinctive tumor that usually occurs in the kidney and rarely in the liver. angiomyolipoma of other sites is extremely rare, and, to our knowledge, only 2 cases have been described in the nasal cavity. We present 2 additional cases of AML of the nasal cavity and discuss the difference between them and renal AML. case reports AND PATHOLOGIC FINDINGS: Two tumors in a 66-year-old man and an 88-year-old woman without tuberous sclerosis are described. They showed 20-mm, well-circumscribed, polypoid shapes. Histologically, they were composed of mature smooth muscle cells, fat cells, and various-sized blood vessels. In addition, aggregated small lymphocytes were noted. Neither epithelioid smooth muscle cells nor HMB45 immunoreactivity was seen in either case. CONCLUSIONS: The clinicopathologic features of AML of the nasal cavity are distinct from renal and hepatic AML and are common to those of AML arising in the skin and oral and pharyngeal mucosa. The term mucocutaneous angiomyolipoma is thought to be appropriate to express these characteristic tumors.
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ranking = 1.7000218419821
keywords = cavity
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8/319. ameloblastoma with basal cell carcinoma-like feature emerging as a nasal polyp.

    A case of a 63-year-old man with ameloblastoma with basal cell carcinoma (BCC)-like features clinically emerging as a nasal polyp is reported. The left nasal cavity was filled with a solid mass, which seemed to be a sinusitis-associated nasal polyp. The polyp was covered by parakeratotic squamous epithelium which was directly connected to the BCC-like tumor nest. The BCC-like features gradually changed to adamantinoid features. The polyp was connected with a huge mass filling the maxillary sinus and the molar area, which consisted of conventional ameloblastoma features. Although the tumor was finally diagnosed as an ameloblastoma of the maxilla, the biopsy specimen forced us to face the problem of differential diagnosis, ameloblastoma with BCC-like features or adamantinoid basal cell carcinoma (BCC). Immunohistochemical examination revealed that tumor cells of the ameloblastoma reacted with anticytokeratin antibody KL-1 but not with antiepithelial antibody Ber-EP4, and these reaction patterns were completely contrary to those of BCC. It is emphasized that immunohistochemical examination using anticytokeratin antibody KL-1 and antiepithelial antibody Ber-EP4 is a good tool for distinguishing ameloblastoma with BCC-like features from adamantinoid BCC.
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ranking = 0.24286026314029
keywords = cavity
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9/319. Pleomorphic adenoma of the nasal septum.

    Pleomorphic adenoma is the commonest benign tumour of the major salivary glands. It can also occur in minor salivary glands, mainly in the oral cavity, but also in other sites in the head and neck both within and outwith the upper aerodigestive tract. We present a rare case of pleomorphic adenoma of the nasal septum with consideration of the clinical management and a review of the literature.
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ranking = 0.25
keywords = cavity, oral cavity
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10/319. Malignant oncocytoma of the nasal cavity: a case report.

    Malignant oncocytoma is a rare clinical entity and is most commonly seen in the salivary glands. Its occurrence in the nasal cavity is extremely rare, and only 4 such cases have been reported in the literature. The authors report one such case in a 60-year-old woman, which presented as a slow-growing nasal mass arising from the nasal septum, with no lymph node metastasis, which was successfully managed by a combined modality of treatment-surgery followed by radiation therapy. The relevant literature has been reviewed. The case is discussed as a possible differential diagnosis for a mass in the nose.
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ranking = 1.2143013157015
keywords = cavity
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