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Comparative Study on Imaging and Pathological Features of Elastofibroma Dorsi

Overview
Journal Chin J Cancer
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Oncology
Date 2010 Jul 2
PMID 20591224
Citations 2
Authors
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Abstract

Background And Objective: Elastofibroma dorsi has an extremely low incidence. At present, comparative study on imaging manifestations and pathologic findings of elastofibroma dorsi has not been reported in China. This study was to investigate clinical manifestations, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) appearances, and pathologic features of elastofibroma dorsi and to improve preoperative imaging diagnosis of this disease.

Methods: The clinical manifestations, imaging findings, and pathologic appearances of 6 cases of elastofibroma dorsi were retrospectively analyzed and related literatures were reviewed. All patients were examined with MRI, and 4 of them were examined with CT scan.

Results: All patients were above 30 years old without obvious symptoms. The tumors presented as a lenticular soft-tissue mass in the deep subscapular region. The tumor's density on plain CT scan or signal intensity on MR T1-weighted image was approximately equal to that of muscle with some interlaced fat-like areas within mass suppressed by fat-suppression MR sequences, which corresponded to dense collagen tissue and interspersed mature adipose tissue observed microscopically.

Conclusions: CT and MRI can reflect the histological features of elastofibroma dorsi. On the basis of their imaging characteristics, a correct preoperative diagnosis of elastofibroma dorsi can easily be made.

Citing Articles

Elastofibroma of scapula: a case report and literature review.

Braham E, Hergli I, Sadok Boudaya M, Ismail O, Ayadi-Kaddour A, Kilani T Ann Transl Med. 2014; 1(3):31.

PMID: 25332975 PMC: 4200669. DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2305-5839.2013.05.01.


Painful elastofibroma dorsi: a report of a case and a brief review of the literature.

Falidas E, Arvanitis D, Anyfantakis G, Pazidis A, Koukouli Z, Miltiadou D Case Rep Orthop. 2013; 2013:794247.

PMID: 23401824 PMC: 3557630. DOI: 10.1155/2013/794247.