Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49512
Título: Dorsal osseous hemangiopericytoma: A primary or metastatic tumour?
Autores/as: Coloma-Valverde, Gustavo 
Coloma-Rodríguez, G.
Camacho, M. C.
Clasificación UNESCO: 32 Ciencias médicas
320713 Oncología
Palabras clave: Hemangiopericytoma
Metastasis
Primary tumour
Fecha de publicación: 2009
Publicación seriada: Revista de Neurologia 
Resumen: INTRODUCTION. Hemangiopericytomas are potentially malignant vascular tumours. They are usually located in the thighs, the buttocks and the retroperitoneum. Recurrence is very common and they produce metastases that are not usually intracranial within a period of not less than 24 months. Treatment involves surgery, accompanied by radiotherapy. CASE REPORT. A 32-year-old female who had been suffering from back pain for two months. The clinical examination was normal; however, the neuroimaging studies showed a lumbar tumour that involved the L1, and the patient was therefore submitted to a surgical intervention. The histopathological analysis showed the tumour to be a hemangiopericytoma. The patient received radiotherapy, and two months later presented recurrent vomiting and headaches. Computerised tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the head enabled us to diagnose an intracranial tumour and she underwent a new operation. A new histopathological analysis of the lesion confirmed that it was a meningeal hemangiopericytoma. CONCLUSIONS. After reviewing the literature, this is the first case of a hemangiopericytoma in which the initial symptoms were caused by metastasis and not by the primary tumour.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49512
ISSN: 0210-0010
DOI: 10.33588/rn.4812.2008546
Fuente: Revista de Neurologia[ISSN 0210-0010],v. 48(12), p. 636-638 (Junio 2009)
Colección:Artículos
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