Aggressive fibromatosis: evaluation by computed tomography and angiography.
- 1 February 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in Radiology
- Vol. 150 (2) , 495-501
- https://doi.org/10.1148/radiology.150.2.6691107
Abstract
Fifteen CT [computed tomography] scans of 13 patients who had aggressive fibromatosis were generally accurate in showing the extent of disease, although the CT definition of half or more of the margins of 9 lesions was poor. Fibromatosis tumors were typically isodense or slightly hypodense with muscle when no contrast medium was used, and they enhanced to hyperdense with better delineation during infusion of contrast medium. Obliterated intermuscular planes did not always signify disease extension; the relationship to bone was often obscured by beam-hardening artifact; and small blood vessels were often invisible. Arteriograms of 7 of 8 patients showed some hypervascularity and helped to delineate lesions and vessels that were poorly seen on CT scans. In 4 instances CT findings were clearer, in 2 instances arteriographic findings were clearer, and twice the findings were equally clear. Three of 6 bone scintigrams added accurate information about involvement of adjacent bones. Since fibromatosis can microscopically infiltrate beyond the margins indicated by radiographic studies and even by direct palpation at operation, the surgeon should obtain a wide margin beyond the defined tumor limits.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pitfalls in the use of computed tomography for musculoskeletal tumors in children.Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1981
- The extremity soft-tissue lesion: a comparative study of ultrasound, computed tomography, and xeroradiography.Radiology, 1981
- Comparison of Computed Tomography and Other Imaging Modalities in the Evaluation of Musculoskeletal TumorsRadiology, 1979