Periosteal osteoblastoma: A case report and a review of the literature

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Abstract

Osteoblastomas located on the surface of cortical bone, so-called periosteal (juxtacortical) osteoblastomas, are extremely rare. A 24-year-old man complained of pain and swelling in the left knee. The clinical and radiological investigation showed a tumor located in the posterior portion of the distal shaft of the femur. The radiological differential diagnosis included parosteal osteosarcoma, periosteal chondroma and periostitis ossificans. A frozen section was obtained and histology revealed an osteoblastoma with large epithelioid-appearing osteoblasts consistent with an aggressive osteoblastoma. An en bloc resection of the tumor was performed and the definitive histology of the whole specimen revealed a typical osteoblastoma. The authors draw attention to the fact that periosteal osteoblastoma is a rare tumor that could be mistaken clinically and histologically for other and more common tumors at this location.

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Sulzbacher, I., Puig, S., Trieb, K., & Lang, S. (2000). Periosteal osteoblastoma: A case report and a review of the literature. Pathology International, 50(8), 667–671. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1827.2000.01088.x

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