A 45-year-old male was admitted with difficulty in walking due to leg pain. At the time of the first visit, a reduced serum phosphorus concentration and an increased serum alkaline phosphatase concentration of unknown etiology were observed. Either a whole body bone scintigraphy or CT of the neck, chest and abdominal region did not reveal any underlying disease. However both the whole body 201Tl scintigraphy and 99mTc MIBI SPECT showed accumulation in the right knee region, and a small tumor was detected by MRI examination. After a diagnosis of oncogenic osteomalacia due to this tumor was determined the tumor was surgically removed, and turned out to be a hemangiopericytoma. By removal of the tumor, either the symptoms or the laboratory data were improved significantly. In this case, both 201Tl scintigraphy and 99mTc scintigraphy MIBI were useful in identifying the location of the tumor which caused oncogenic osteomalacia.
Aggressive fibromatoses commonly originate from the musculoskeletal system, mesentery, and retroperitoneum. We report a case of aggressive fibromatosis arising from the spermatic cord. On helical computed tomography, the lesion appeared as a solid mass with well-defined borders in the scrotum and with infiltrative features in the retroperitoneum.
A port catheter system for hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy was implanted percutaneously via the left subclavian artery in 41 patients for treatment of unresectable liver metastases. The catheter tip was inserted into the gastroduodenal artery (GDA), the end hole was occluded with a guidewire fragment, and a side-hole for infusion was positioned at the bifurcation of the proper hepatic artery and the GDA. The GDA was embolized with steel coils around the infusion catheter tip via a transfemoral catheter. This procedure is designed to reduce the incidence of hepatic artery occlusion and infusion catheter dislocation.
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