• Title/Summary/Keyword: Periosteal osteoma

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A Clinical Experience of Frontal Periosteal Osteoma: 20 Cases (전두부 외골종 20례의 임상적 경험)

  • Jung, Jae Hak;Kim, Young Hwan;Sun, Hook;Hwang, So Min;Kang, Chul Sun
    • Archives of Plastic Surgery
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    • v.33 no.3
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    • pp.319-323
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    • 2006
  • Osteoma is benign tumor composed of mature compact or cancellous bone. Generally it is classified as periosteal(or peripheral) osteoma and endosteal(or central) osteoma by its origin. Clinically, periosteal osteoma on forehead is usually asymptomatic. From March 2002 to February 2005, We experienced 20 patients(23 cases) of histologically confirmed frontal osteoma. 20 patients are classified as sex, age, the number of osteoma, size, location and shape. Out of 20 patients, 16 were female and 4 were male in sex and mean age was 46. 18 patients have only one lesion but one patient has two lesions and another patient has three lesions. The size of osteoma varied from $7{\times}5{\times}3mm$ to $16{\times}14{\times}6mm$ and mean size is $12{\times}10{\times}5mm$. All osteomas were located at midline of forehead and shape of attachment was all sessile type. Surgical excision was superficial ostectomy through direct cutaneous incision or endoscopic approach. we obtained satisfactory result without specific complication.

CT-Guided Percutanous Nidus Excision of Osteoid Osteoma - Burr Down Technique - (유골 골종에서 전산화 단층 촬영 유도하 경피적 핵 절제술 - 천공기 이용법 -)

  • Kim, Byoung-Suck;Cho, Jae-Hyun;Lee, Kyi-Beom;Yu, Chung-Su;Ahn, Jae-In
    • The Journal of the Korean bone and joint tumor society
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.51-55
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    • 1999
  • Aspirin has usually been taken for pain relief originating in the nidus of osteoid osteoma, however it takes too long to become effective. Because of the protracted painful course and the unpredictability of regression, osteoid osteoma is usually removed. And then, the defective host bone is internally fixed by plate and screws and augumented by autogenous bone graft. However, the common intracortical location and exuberant periosteal reaction hinders the exact intraoperative localization of the nidus. The authors managed 6 patients by computerized tomography-guided percutaneous nidus excision with a relatively small skin incision, small cortical window, short operation time and no bone graft. It may be one of the best options for removal of the nidus of osteoid osteoma with certainty.

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