Fingertumoren
Intraosseous
lipoma • Intraosseous lipoma of 3rd finger - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
X-ray showing
calcified enchondromas localized in finger a 37 year old patient affected with Ollier disease
Pitfalls in
the diagnosis of common benign bone tumours in children. Enchondroma of the proximal phalanx (arrowhead). Note the small points of calcification at the proximal aspect of the lesion, highly suggestive of a cartilaginous matrix
Pitfalls in
the diagnosis of common benign bone tumours in children. Ollier disease—multiple enchondromas of the hand
Pitfalls in
the diagnosis of common benign bone tumours in children. Enchondroma of the fifth metacarpal (arrow) and enchondroma protuberans (arrowhead) of the proximal phalanx
Rare site
giant cell tumors: report of two cases on phalanges of the finger and review of literature. a Amputation stump with ulcer at the tip. b Radiograph showing partial amputation of the proximal phalanx with expansile lesion involving the articular surface. c CT scan showing the irregular expansile lytic lesion with cortical erosion
Rare site
giant cell tumors: report of two cases on phalanges of the finger and review of literature. a Radiograph (AP, lateral) reveals an expansile lytic lesion with cortical break. b CT scan of the middle phalanx showing marked osteolysis. c Postoperative radiograph (AP, oblique) at 14 months showing incorporation of the cancellous graft
Pseudotumoural
soft tissue lesions of the hand and wrist: a pictorial review. Bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation (Nora’s lesion). a Plain radiograph of the finger showing a turret exostosis at the dorsal aspect of the proximal phalanx of the second finger (arrowhead). b Longitudinal ultrasound shows the exostosis causing focal contour deformity of the cortical bone (arrowheads) with adjacent hypoechoic cartilage cap (callipers)
Fingertumoren
Siehe auch:
- Enchondrom Finger
- Osteom Finger
- Enchondrom Mittelhandknochen
- Epidermoidzyste Finger
- Riesenzelltumor Fingerknochen
- Glomustumor am Finger
- subkutane Rheumaknoten
- verkalktes Enchondrom
- Läsionen der Fingerspitze
- intraossäres Lipom am Finger
- Ewing-Sarkom des Fingers
- Ganglion Finger
- Ewingsarkom des Daumens
- bizarre parosteale osteochondromatöse Proliferation der Hand und der Finger
und weiter:
Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu Fingertumoren:
bizarre
parosteale osteochondromatöse Proliferation der Hand und der Finger