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15.01.2024 | Case Report

Isolated infantile myofibroma of the calvarium: Report of a case with a literature review

verfasst von: Mustafa Kemal Demir, Ozlem Yapicier, Ozgur Celik, Onder Ertem, Deniz Kilic

Erschienen in: Child's Nervous System | Ausgabe 4/2024

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Abstract

Objective

Infantile myofibromatosis is a rare entity of childhood characterized by benign myofibroblastic tumors in the soft tissues, the bones, and occasionally the viscera. Solitary skeletal lesions are relatively uncommon. Calvarial involvement should be distinguished from more aggressive tumors for appropriate treatment.

Methods

We reviewed solitary infantile myofibroma of the calvarium and discussed the relevant computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings along with differential diagnosis. A case study of the frontal bone in a 5-month-old girl was also presented.

Results

Fourteen cases were reviewed, including the current case. Of the 13 cases with known sex, eight were male and five female. The mean age was 3.03 with an age range of 0.41–9 years. Nine of the 14 tumors were in the frontal bone. The lesions were intradiploic with tabula interna and/or externa of the calvaria involvement. The mean largest diameter was 22.3 mm. Upon computed tomography, all the lesions were expansile and lytic, and hypoattenuated, isoattenuated or occasionally hyperatenuated. Calcification was not seen. On magnetic resonance imaging, most neoplasms were hypointense on T1-weighted and T2-weighted images. Neoplasms showed hypointense signal on diffusion-weighted imaging and hyperintense on apparent diffusion coefficient, without restricted diffusion in three cases. All lesions were intensely enhanced after gadolinium administration. Treatment was total surgical resection and recurrence was not observed during follow-up.

Conclusions

Infantile myofibromas are rare, typically intradiploic expansile lytic lesions with tabula interna and/or externa involvement. Distinctive imaging features include the presence of hipointense signals on T2-weighted magnetic resonance images without restricted diffusion on diffusion-weighted imaging. A slow-growing, firm, painless, and nontender mass with supportive imaging findings should raise suspicion of the disease.
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Metadaten
Titel
Isolated infantile myofibroma of the calvarium: Report of a case with a literature review
verfasst von
Mustafa Kemal Demir
Ozlem Yapicier
Ozgur Celik
Onder Ertem
Deniz Kilic
Publikationsdatum
15.01.2024
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Child's Nervous System / Ausgabe 4/2024
Print ISSN: 0256-7040
Elektronische ISSN: 1433-0350
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-024-06289-9

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