1954
DOI: 10.2106/00004623-195436020-00006
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Subperiosteal Giant-Cell Tumor

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1956
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Cited by 33 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Thompson [59] reported that in 71% of the cases in the literature the patient had Jaffee [ 2 ] described aneurysmal bone cysts radiologically as ballooned-out dis-Schobinger and Stoll [60], reporting on the arteriographic appearance of the le-An aneurysmal bone cyst is not a true aneurysm; nor is it a true cyst (since it Grossly, the lesions are blood-filled cysts of bone, eccentrically enlarged in an explosive manner and limited from infiltrating the surrounding tissue by a thin subperiosteal shell of cortical and medullary bone. When the protective shell of bone is removed, a cystic cavity divided by incomplete septa can be seen to contain fluid and nonstagnant blood, which does not pulsate but which wells up continuously until complete removal of the tissue or complete vascular control is effected.…”
Section: Pathologic Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thompson [59] reported that in 71% of the cases in the literature the patient had Jaffee [ 2 ] described aneurysmal bone cysts radiologically as ballooned-out dis-Schobinger and Stoll [60], reporting on the arteriographic appearance of the le-An aneurysmal bone cyst is not a true aneurysm; nor is it a true cyst (since it Grossly, the lesions are blood-filled cysts of bone, eccentrically enlarged in an explosive manner and limited from infiltrating the surrounding tissue by a thin subperiosteal shell of cortical and medullary bone. When the protective shell of bone is removed, a cystic cavity divided by incomplete septa can be seen to contain fluid and nonstagnant blood, which does not pulsate but which wells up continuously until complete removal of the tissue or complete vascular control is effected.…”
Section: Pathologic Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%