Results 201 to 210 of about 26,677 (229)
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Giant Cell Tumor of Bone

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1986
Giant cell tumor GCT of bone remains a difficult and challenging management problem because there are no absolute clinical, radiographic, or histologic parameters that accurately predict the tendency of any single lesion to recur or metastasize. Enneking's and Campanacci's radiographic classifications and surgical staging are helpful in planning the ...
Jeffrey J. Eckardt, Thomas J. Grogan
  +9 more sources

Giant Cell Tumor of Bone

Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 2013
Giant cell tumor (GCT) of bone is one type of giant cell-rich lesion of bone. This benign mesenchymal tumor has characteristic multinuclear giant cells. Mononuclear stromal cells are the physiologically active and diagnostic cell type. Most GCTs are located in the epiphyseal regions of long bones.
Joseph H. Schwab   +4 more
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GIANT-CELL TUMOR OF BONE

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1952
True giant-cell tumors are quite rare. Solitary bone cysts occur with about the same frequency, while sarcomata of bone are found five times as often as either. We agree with Geschickter and Copeland that. there is a close clinical kinship between giant-cell tumor and solitary bone cyst., and tlsat they probably have a common origin.
Thomas Richardson, Marcus J. Stewart
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Giant-Cell Tumors of Bone

New England Journal of Medicine, 1956
IN 1920 Dr. E. A. Codman, of Boston, organized the Registry of Bone Sarcoma. A committee consisting of Dr. Codman, Dr. Ewing and Dr. Bloodgood studied a large number of cases of bone tumors, and from them they separated a group of benign giant-cell tumors.
Carlton R. Haines, Ernest M. Daland
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Giant Cell Tumor Of Bone

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1996
Giant cell tumor is a locally aggressive tumor with a high recurrence rate if not completely excised. The condition is more common among Asians than whites. During a 10-year period 44 patients, ranging in age from 12 to 51 years, were treated. The most common sites were the proximal femur and the distal radius.
P. C. Leung   +2 more
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GIANT CELL TUMORS OF BONE

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 1993
Giant cell tumor is a lesion that usually presents with a radiographically characteristic appearance in a predictable location and patient population. It has a few rare presentations such as pulmonary metastases and multifocal lesions. Prognosis of ultimate tumor behavior is dependent on surgical staging (which requires careful radiographic analysis to
B J, Manaster, A J, Doyle
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Giant-Cell Tumors of Bone

Radiology, 1947
During the period from Jan. 1, 1942, to Oct. 1, 1945, 656 patients were admitted to an army hospital designated as a radiation therapy center. Of this number, 25 had primary bone tumors, including 10 giant-cell tumors in the diagnosis or treatment of which we participated.
Franklin B. Bogart, Allison E. Imler
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Multicentric Giant Cell Tumor of Bone

Orthopedics, 2023
The typical presentation of giant cell tumor of bone is a solitary lesion involving the meta-epiphyseal region of the long bones. The presence of more than one distinct giant cell tumor in the same patient is rare. This study reports on 7 patients with multicentric giant cell tumor of bone. Clinical and radiologic features were reviewed to
Errani, Costantino   +6 more
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Giant Cell Tumor of Bone: An Update

Current Oncology Reports, 2021
To highlight the new developments in the management of advanced giant cell tumor of bone, a rare locally aggressive benign tumor, which was traditionally managed with surgery alone by either curettage and local adjuvant therapy, wide resection, or marginal excision. Here, we review the current role of systemic therapy for management of locally advanced
Sant P. Chawla, Atrayee Basu Mallick
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Giant-cell tumor of bone.

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1987
Of 327 patients who had a giant-cell tumor of bone and were seen at the Istituto Rizzoli, 293 were treated at the Institute, and 280 of these were followed for two to forty-four years. The distribution according to sex and age of the patient and site of the tumor was similar to the distributions in major reports of large series.
Mario Campanacci   +3 more
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