Total: 5 |
|
PMID (PMCID) | ||
---|---|---|
27931523 |
FEMALE | Adult |
A blue middle ear mass: Cholesterol granuloma mimicking a glomus tumor and endolymphatic sac tumor. | ||
Olcott C, Strasnick B. Am J Otolaryngol. 2017;38(1):100-102. |
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A blue middle ear mass: Cholesterol granuloma mimicking a glomus tumor and endolymphatic sac tumor. | ||
26235189 |
FEMALE | Middle Aged |
An unknown mass: the differential diagnosis of digit tumors. | ||
Longhurst WD, Khachemoune A. Int J Dermatol. 2015;54(11):1214-25. |
||
They go on to discuss the presentation and treatment of common tumor lesions of the finger likely to be encountered in the dermatologist's clinic including: ganglion cyst/mucous cyst, giant-cell tumor, verruca vulgaris, epidermal inclusion cyst, poroma, porocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, melanoma, infantile digital fibromatosis, acquired digital fibrokeratoma, Koenen's tumor, schwannoma, cutaneous neurofibroma, pyogenic granuloma, hemangioma, glomus tumor, epithelioid sarcoma, and metastatic disease. | ||
3921911 |
MIXED_SAMPLE | Child |
Argon laser treatment of head and neck vascular lesions. | ||
Parkin JL, Dixon JA. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1985;93(2):211-6. |
||
Port wine stains (PWSs), hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasias (HHTs), hemangiomas, arterial venous malformations (AVMs), vascular granulomas and polyps, glomus tumors, and nasopharyngeal angiofibromas are vascular lesions of the head and neck potentially responsive to treatment with the argon laser. | ||
6257993 |
FEMALE | Adult |
Cholesterol granuloma presenting as an isolated middle ear tumor. | ||
Miglets AW, Booth JB. Laryngoscope. 1981;91(3):410-5. |
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The following patient with an isolated middle ear cholesterol granuloma presented with signs and symptoms more closely resembling a glomus tumor. | ||
384878 |
MIXED_SAMPLE | Adult |
[Bowen disease of the nail apparatus. Report of 5 cases and review of the 20 cases of the literature (author's transl)]. | ||
Baran R, Dupre A, Sayag J, Letessier S, Robins P, Bureau H. Ann Dermatol Venereol. 1979;106(3):227-33. |
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The clinical picture can be protean and mimic verrucae, onychomycosis, paronychia, eczema, pyogenic granuloma, verrucous tuberculosis, subungual exostosis, glomus tumor, dermatitis vegetans, amelanotic malignant melanoma, kerato-acanthoma and of course squamous cell carcinoma. |