Search results for “fibromas”

345 results
Article

Gardner fibroma

Gardner fibromas or Gardner associated fibromas are benign fibrous plaque-like soft tissue masses formed by a haphazard arrangement of collagen fibres usually associated with familial adenomatous polyposis. Terminology The term 'desmoid precursor lesion' is now discouraged 1. Epidemiology Ga...
Article

Desmoplastic fibroma

Desmoplastic fibromas are extremely rare bone tumours that do not metastasise but may be locally aggressive. They are considered to be a bony counterpart of soft tissue desmoid tumours and are histologically identical.  Epidemiology Desmoplastic fibroma of bone is rare and mostly found in youn...
Article

Ovarian fibroma

Ovarian fibromas are benign ovarian tumours of sex cord/stromal origin. Although fibromas account for ~4% of all ovarian neoplasms, they are the most common sex cord ovarian tumours. Epidemiology Fibromas occur at all ages but are most frequently seen in middle-aged women. Associations They ...
Article

Odontogenic fibroma

Odontogenic fibromas are benign mesenchymal odontogenic tumours with varying amounts of fibrous connective tissue. Epidemiology Odontogenic fibromas are rare tumours and are more common in women. Central odontogenic fibromas occur in a wide age range and peripheral odontomas have a peak betwee...
Article

Cardiac fibroma

Cardiac fibromas, also known as cardiac fibromatosis, are benign congenital cardiac tumours that usually manifest in children.  Epidemiology Cardiac fibromas are tumours that primarily affect children (most cases are detected in infants or in utero) with a ratio of 4:1 compared with adults 5. ...
Article

Ossifying fibroma

Ossifying fibromas are benign bone lesions that should be differentiated from non-ossifying fibromas and fibrous dysplasia. Osteofibrous dysplasia is considered as a separate pathological entity in view of its different presentation and treatment, although histopathologically similar to ossifyin...
Article

Chondromyxoid fibroma

Chondromyxoid fibromas (CMF) are extremely rare, benign cartilaginous neoplasms that account for <1% of all bone tumours 1. CMF accounts for one of the 'C's in the popular mnemonic for lucent bone lesions FEGNOMASHIC. Epidemiology  As with all rare lesions, reported epidemiology varies: age:...
Article

Ameloblastic fibroma

Ameloblastic fibromas appear as unilocular lucent mandibular lesions, most frequently in the posterior mandible, and are usually associated with impacted teeth, centred on the unerupted crown. They, therefore, appear very similar to unilocular ameloblastomas. They are composed of enamel and embr...
Article

Calcifying aponeurotic fibroma

Calcifying aponeurotic fibromas, also known as juvenile aponeurotic fibromas or just aponeurotic fibromas are superficial benign potentially recurrent fibroblastic soft tissue tumours usually seen in the palms and soles of children and adolescents 1,2. Epidemiology Calcifying aponeurotic fibr...
Article

Nuchal type fibroma

Nuchal-type fibromas or nuchal fibromas are rare benign fibrous tumours arising from the connective tissues of the neck. Terminology The term 'collagenosis nuchae' is now discouraged 1. Epidemiology Nuchal-type fibromas are rare tumours and are mainly found in men in their 30s and 40s 1. As...
Article

Tendon sheath fibroma

Tendon sheath fibromas are rare proliferative lesions with common imaging features of tenosynovial giant cell tumours. Epidemiology They are found in adults typically between the age of 20 and 50 with a 3:1 male predominance 2. Pathology Tendon sheath fibromas are lobulated, round-to-oval, e...
Article

Non-ossifying fibroma

Non-ossifying fibromas (NOF) are benign and generally self-limiting osteoclastic giant cell-rich bone tumours typically found in the metaphyses of long bones. They are classified as osteoclastic giant cell-rich bone tumours 1,2. NOFs account for the 'N' in the popular mnemonic for lucent bone l...
Article

Cemento-ossifying fibroma

Cemento-ossifying fibroma (COF) are rare, benign neoplasms that usually arise from the mandible or maxilla. They most often arise from the tooth bearing areas of these bones. Terminology In the 2005 WHO histological classification of odontogenic tumours, this tumour is referred to as "ossifyin...
Case

Ovarian fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Roberto Schubert
Published 03 Jul 2011
98% complete
MRI
Case

Ovarian fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Fadi Aidi
Published 12 Nov 2020
98% complete
MRI
Case

Ovarian fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Ahmed Abdrabou
Published 28 Jun 2015
95% complete
MRI
Case

Plantar fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Akos Jaray
Published 22 Jan 2020
94% complete
Ultrasound
Case

Ovarian fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Hala Maher
Published 16 Jun 2021
94% complete
Pathology Ultrasound
Case

Chondromyxoid fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Naim Qaqish
Published 10 Sep 2020
92% complete
X-ray MRI
Case

Ovarian fibroma

  Diagnosis certain
Mostafa Elfeky
Published 15 Jan 2024
92% complete
MRI Photo

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