1.Benign notochordal cell tumor of cervical vertebrae: a clinicopathologic analysis.
Jin HUANG ; Zhiming JIANG ; Juan TANG ; Huizhen ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2014;43(11):763-766
OBJECTIVETo report 2 rare cases of benign notochordal cell tumor (BNCT), according to WHO classification of tumors of soft tissue and bone (4th edition). Their radiologic and clincopathologic features and differential diagnosis were investigated.
METHODSTwo cases of BNCT were studied by retrospective review of the clinical, radiologic, pathologic and immunophenotypical findings. Related literatures were reviewed at the same time.
RESULTSCase 1 was a 53-year-old man, and case 2 was a 61-year-old woman. Radiographically, both patients presented with abnormal imaging findings in the fifth cervical vertebral body with the lesions located within the bone but without extra osseous mass. Histopathologically, the lesions lacked lobular architecture and extracellular myxoid matrix. The tumor cells were vacuolated and had centrally or peripherally placed round or oval nuclei with small nucleoli, mimicking mature adipocytes. No cytological atypia or mitotic figures were seen. The affected bone trabeculae were sclerotic and islands of bone marrow were often entrapped within the tumor.
CONCLUSIONSAlthough sharing similar anatomic distribution and immunophenotype to those of chordoma, BNCT has distinct radiologic and pathologic features and different treatment and prognosis. The differential diagnosis between BNCT and chordoma requires detailed clinical, radiologic and histopathologic evaluations.
Cervical Vertebrae ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology ; Chordoma ; pathology ; Diagnosis, Differential ; Diagnostic Imaging ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Notochord ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology ; Radiography ; Retrospective Studies ; Spinal Neoplasms ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology
2.Giant Vertebral Notochordal Rest: Magnetic Resonance and Diffusion Weighted Imaging Findings.
Ali Yusuf ONER ; Sergin AKPEK ; Turgut TALI ; Murat UCAR
Korean Journal of Radiology 2009;10(3):303-306
A giant vertebral notochordal rest is a newly described, benign entity that is easily confused with a vertebral chordoma. As microscopic notochordal rests are rarely found in adult autopsies, the finding of a macroscopic vertebral lesion is a new entity with only seven previously presented cases. We report here radiological findings, including diffusion weighted images, of a patient with a giant notochordal remnant confined to the L5 vertebra, with an emphasis on its distinction from a chordoma.
Chordoma/*diagnosis
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
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Female
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Humans
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Low Back Pain/etiology
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Lumbar Vertebrae/pathology/radiography
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging/*methods
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Middle Aged
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Notochord/*pathology/radiography
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Physical Therapy Modalities
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Spinal Neoplasms/*diagnosis/therapy
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed