Similarly to soft tissue tumours, the World Health Organisation (WHO) classification categorises bone tumours based on their similarity to normal adult tissue. The most recent WHO classification provides an updated classification scheme that integrates the biological behaviour of bone tumours, particularly cartilage-forming tumours, and tumours are now further subdivided as benign, intermediate (locally aggressive or rarely metastasising), and malignant. Radiologists play an important role in the detection and initial characterisation of bone tumours, with careful analysis of their matrix mineralisation, location, and overall anatomic extent including extra-compartmental extension and neurovascular invasion. Radiography remains central to t...
Mesenchymal tumours represent one of the most challenging field of diagnostic pathology and refineme...
OBJECTIVES: To examine the diagnostic accuracy of imaging modalities in skeletal tumours versus path...
Bone tumours are relatively uncommon. The precise incidence of specific bone tumours is not known, ...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) classification categorises musculoskeletal soft tissue tumours (...
Imaging is the key to diagnosing and guiding management of bone tumors. Although radiographs are th...
SummaryFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) improves tissue characterisation and staging of b...
Background: Over the last century, there has been a remarkable development in the study of bone and ...
Background: Chondrogenic tumors are the most frequent primary bone tumors. Malignant chondrogenic tu...
Purpose: To investigate the utility of opposed-phase magnetic resonance imaging (OP MRI) in differen...
Over the last century, there has been a remarkable development in the study of benign bone tumours. ...
Summary In this review we discuss an approach to diagnosing primary bone tumours, namely the cartil...
Osseous haemangiomas are benign skeletal tumours, usually identi ed as incidental ndings on differen...
The diagnosis of bone tumors begins with suspicion due to some clinical symptoms or due to image fin...
In daily radiological practice, one often encounters problems in differentiating real bone tumors fr...
Primary bone tumours account for less than 0.2% of all neoplasms but malignant bone tumours represen...
Mesenchymal tumours represent one of the most challenging field of diagnostic pathology and refineme...
OBJECTIVES: To examine the diagnostic accuracy of imaging modalities in skeletal tumours versus path...
Bone tumours are relatively uncommon. The precise incidence of specific bone tumours is not known, ...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) classification categorises musculoskeletal soft tissue tumours (...
Imaging is the key to diagnosing and guiding management of bone tumors. Although radiographs are th...
SummaryFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) improves tissue characterisation and staging of b...
Background: Over the last century, there has been a remarkable development in the study of bone and ...
Background: Chondrogenic tumors are the most frequent primary bone tumors. Malignant chondrogenic tu...
Purpose: To investigate the utility of opposed-phase magnetic resonance imaging (OP MRI) in differen...
Over the last century, there has been a remarkable development in the study of benign bone tumours. ...
Summary In this review we discuss an approach to diagnosing primary bone tumours, namely the cartil...
Osseous haemangiomas are benign skeletal tumours, usually identi ed as incidental ndings on differen...
The diagnosis of bone tumors begins with suspicion due to some clinical symptoms or due to image fin...
In daily radiological practice, one often encounters problems in differentiating real bone tumors fr...
Primary bone tumours account for less than 0.2% of all neoplasms but malignant bone tumours represen...
Mesenchymal tumours represent one of the most challenging field of diagnostic pathology and refineme...
OBJECTIVES: To examine the diagnostic accuracy of imaging modalities in skeletal tumours versus path...
Bone tumours are relatively uncommon. The precise incidence of specific bone tumours is not known, ...