Erschienen in:
01.01.2008 | Orthopaedic Surgery
Low-grade central osteosarcoma mimicking fibrous dysplasia: a report of two cases
verfasst von:
K. Muramatsu, T. Hashimoto, S. Seto, T. Gondo, K. Ihara, T. Taguchi
Erschienen in:
Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery
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Ausgabe 1/2008
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Abstract
Low-grade central osteosarcoma is an unusual variant of conventional osteosarcoma. We present here two rare cases of low-grade central osteosarcoma resembling fibrous dysplasia. A 24-year-old woman diagnosed as fibrous dysplasia was treated with intra-lesional excision and curettage of the tumor but tumor recurred at 4 months after surgery. Distal femoral en-bloc resection was performed followed by arthroplasty with mega-prosthesis of the knee. A 57-year-old man diagnosed as central osteosarcoma was treated with wide excision of the tumor, followed by reconstruction with the vascularized fibula graft combined with an autogenous irradiated bone graft. Because of the difficulty in distinguishing low-grade central osteosarcoma from a benign lesion, open biopsy is needed to obtain a large tumor sample. Careful clinical and pathological evaluation is required to obtain a definite diagnosis. The treatment of low-grade central osteosarcoma is en-block resection with wide surgical margins.