Case Identification
Case ID Number
Tumor Type
Body region
Position within the bone
Periosteal reaction
Benign or Malignant
Clinical case information
Case presentation
This 67 year old male has pain and a mass in the right dominant elbow. He had a history of smoking for many years. Work-up revealed a lytic lesion in the distal humerus.
Radiological findings:
An aggressive lytic destructive lesion has destruyed most of the humerus just above the elbow. No matrix is seen and no periosteal reaction is evident. A bone scan shows the lesion, but no other abnormal areas. An MRI shows the lesion has expanded aggressively into the soft tissues.
Treatment Options:
This lesion could be a primary sarcoma, if so what type is most likely? What would you do? This lesions might also be a metastatic tumor - if so what is the most likely source? What should be done in that case?
Imagen
Case ID Number
Image Types
Image modality
Tumor Name
Tumor Type
Benign or Malignant
Body region
Bone name
Location in the bone
periosteal reaction
position within the bone
Tumor behavior
Tumor density