Erschienen in:
01.09.2013 | Case Report
Fibromatosis Arising in Association with Neuromuscular Hamartoma of the Mandible
verfasst von:
Leena Yaseen Taher, Muhammad Saleem, Suresh Velagapudi, Anas Dababo
Erschienen in:
Head and Neck Pathology
|
Ausgabe 3/2013
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Abstract
Aggressive fibromatosis is a benign but locally-aggressive tumor, which most often affects the muscles of the shoulder, the pelvic girdle, and the thigh. It usually affects adolescents and young adults. Desmoplastic fibroma, considered the bone counterpart of soft tissue fibromatosis, is a rare tumor that usually affects the metaphyseal or diaphyseal portions of long bones or, less commonly, the jaw. Neuromuscular hamartoma, a rare developmental lesion composed of mature elements of both striated muscle and nerve, is usually diagnosed in infants and children and affects large nerve trunks. Rarely, it can affect the head and neck region. Occasional cases showing an association between aggressive fibromatosis and neuromuscular hamartoma have been reported in the literature. Here we present a unique case of an adult patient with desmoplastic fibroma of the mandible in association with neuromuscular hamartoma.