Difference between revisions of "Bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation"

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Revision as of 11:39, 16 October 2014

Bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation
Diagnosis in short

Synonyms Nora lesion


General

A distinctive osteochondromatous proliferation of hands and feet.

Population

  • Young adults
  • 20s-30s

Location

Hands and feet

Radiology

Marginated wide based bony growth projecting into the soft tissues[1]

Gross

  • Nodule covered with glistening cartilage

Microscopic

Disorganized cellular cartilage with a blue tint and patchy ossification matures into disorganized bone. A proliferation of fibroblasts surrounds the lesion and occupies intertrabecular spaces.

DDX

  • Chondrosarcoma
  • Periosteal chondroma
  • Osteochondroma
  • Low grade parosteal osteosarcoma

Diangostic categories

  • Cartilaginous neoplasms
  • Osteocartilaginous neoplasms

Stains

IHC

Molecular

t(1:17)(q32;q21)[2]

Sign out

Prognosis

  • Benign
  • Locally aggressive

See also

References

  1. http://radiopaedia.org/articles/bizarre-parosteal-osteochondromatous-proliferation
  2. Kuruvilla, S.; Marco, R.; Raymond, AK.; Al-Ibraheemi, A.; Tatevian, N. (2011). "BizarreParosteal Osteochondromatous Proliferation (Nora's lesion) with translocation t(1;17)(q32;q21): a case report and role of cytogenetic studies on diagnosis.". Ann Clin Lab Sci 41 (3): 285-7. PMID 22075515.

Grossing article[edit] Introduction. Protocol. Protocol notes. Alternate approaches. See also. Related protocols. References. External links.

Introduction

Specimen opening

Protocol

Protocol notes

Alternate approaches

See also

Related protocols

References

External links

Microscopic (heading)[edit] The key feature(s) should be marked. Definition: A key feature is a distinctive common feature that strongly favours the given diagnosis and whose absense would strongly disfavour the diagnosis or exclude it. Examples: Eosinophils in eosinophilic esophagitis. Nuclear atypia at the free surface in tubular adenoma. See also[edit] Libre Pathology. References. External links[edit] Wikipedia - Manual of style for medicine-related articles (wikipedia.org). Wikipedia Cheatsheet (wikipedia.org).