2016
DOI: 10.1097/md.0000000000004318
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Hemorrhagic, calcified, and ossified benign retroperitoneal schwannoma

Abstract: Background:Schwannomas are mesenchymal tumors arising from the neural sheaths of peripheral nerves. They can almost develop in any part of the body, while head, neck and extremities are the most common sites. Occurrence in the retroperitoneum is rare. Schwannomas can show secondary degenerative changes including cyst formation, hyalinization, hemorrhage, and calcification, whereas the ossified retroperitoneal schwannoma was only reported in a malignant one.Case summary:We first present a benign ossified retrop… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…The majority of tumors with calcification in our cohort arose in association with the spinal nerve roots (10 cases), with the cervical and thoracic regions most commonly involved, or in the CPA (4 cases). These findings are concordant with what has been reported in the literature with nine out of 29 (31%) previously reported cases of schwannomas with calcification presenting as spinal cord masses, most often the thoracic spine, and nine (31%) arising in the CPA/vestibular nerves/internal auditory canal . Of the 10 cases with calcification in our cohort presenting in the spinal region, seven harbored dystrophic calcification, five had psammomatous calcification, and two contained both dystrophic and psammomatous calcifications.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The majority of tumors with calcification in our cohort arose in association with the spinal nerve roots (10 cases), with the cervical and thoracic regions most commonly involved, or in the CPA (4 cases). These findings are concordant with what has been reported in the literature with nine out of 29 (31%) previously reported cases of schwannomas with calcification presenting as spinal cord masses, most often the thoracic spine, and nine (31%) arising in the CPA/vestibular nerves/internal auditory canal . Of the 10 cases with calcification in our cohort presenting in the spinal region, seven harbored dystrophic calcification, five had psammomatous calcification, and two contained both dystrophic and psammomatous calcifications.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The first case documenting calcification in schwannomas was published in 1961 by Lombardi and Passerini who described calcifications in spinal tumors radiologically detected . In the interim, only single case reports and rare small series have documented dystrophic and/or psammomatous calcification or ossification in schwannomas . Furthermore, the two series available describe two cases each and are limited to vestibular schwannomas .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CT and MRI findings show characteristic features such as a well-demarcated, homogeneous, spherical, solitary mass, but none are specific 1. Secondary degenerative changes, including cyst formation, calcification, haemorrhage and hyalinisation, can occasionally occur 2. This was also seen in our patient, where a large heterogeneous mass with areas of necrosis was seen on imaging.…”
Section: Descriptionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…Preoperative diagnosis is challenging and a definitive diagnosis can only be made postoperatively by histopathological and immunohistochemical analyses of surgical specimens. Benign retroperitoneal schwannomas generally have good prognosis after complete resection with a low risk of tumour recurrence 2. Schwannomas should be included in the differential diagnosis of any retroperitoneal abdominal mass.…”
Section: Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They can arise almost anywhere, although the head, neck and extremities are the most common sites[10]. In the abdominal cavity, the retroperitoneum (6% of primary retroperitoneal tumors)[11] and stomach[12] are the most frequently involved sites. However, schwannomas in the ligaments[13], bowel mesentery[14] and abdominal organs including the gallbladder[15], pancreas[16] and liver[17] are rare.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%