From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cylindroma
TURBAN TUMOUR (CYLINDROMA). A rapidly growing fungating tumour on the scalp.
Specialty Oncology, dermatology  Edit this on Wikidata

Cylindroma is a rare, slow-growing, benign tumour of the skin. It mostly affects the face, scalp, and neck regions. [1]

Types include:

Signs and symptoms

The tumours are smooth, firm, pink to crimson in hue, commonly pedunculated, and often numerous. Tumours can sometimes cause pain. The scalp and surrounding skin are the most common sites. When pedunculated, the tumours may be nearly hairless, although the smaller lesions produce dermal nodules with minimal hair loss over them. [2]

Causes

Cylindromas can be sporadic or inherited. [1]

Diagnosis

Computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging provide the best representation of the tumour's extension. [3]

Treatment

Surgical excision is used to treat cylindromas. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c V., Lakshmi Priya; Johnson, Thanka; S., Srismitha; Balakrishnan, Shobana (2022-12-16). "Solitary Dermal Cylindroma in an Uncommon Site: A Rare Case Report". Cureus. doi: 10.7759/cureus.32614. ISSN  2168-8184. PMC  9841088. PMID  36654640.
  2. ^ Guruprasad, Yadavalli; Chauhan, DineshSingh (2012). "Dermal cylindroma of the scalp". National Journal of Maxillofacial Surgery. 3 (1). Medknow: 59. doi: 10.4103/0975-5950.102163. ISSN  0975-5950. PMC  3513812.
  3. ^ Friedrich, Reinhard E. (2010-05-01). "Dermal Cylindroma of the Scalp (Turban Tumour) and Subjacent Calvarian Defects". Anticancer Research. 30 (5). International Institute of Anticancer Research: 1793–1797. ISSN  0250-7005. PMID  20592381. Retrieved 2024-04-03.

Further reading


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cylindroma
TURBAN TUMOUR (CYLINDROMA). A rapidly growing fungating tumour on the scalp.
Specialty Oncology, dermatology  Edit this on Wikidata

Cylindroma is a rare, slow-growing, benign tumour of the skin. It mostly affects the face, scalp, and neck regions. [1]

Types include:

Signs and symptoms

The tumours are smooth, firm, pink to crimson in hue, commonly pedunculated, and often numerous. Tumours can sometimes cause pain. The scalp and surrounding skin are the most common sites. When pedunculated, the tumours may be nearly hairless, although the smaller lesions produce dermal nodules with minimal hair loss over them. [2]

Causes

Cylindromas can be sporadic or inherited. [1]

Diagnosis

Computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging provide the best representation of the tumour's extension. [3]

Treatment

Surgical excision is used to treat cylindromas. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c V., Lakshmi Priya; Johnson, Thanka; S., Srismitha; Balakrishnan, Shobana (2022-12-16). "Solitary Dermal Cylindroma in an Uncommon Site: A Rare Case Report". Cureus. doi: 10.7759/cureus.32614. ISSN  2168-8184. PMC  9841088. PMID  36654640.
  2. ^ Guruprasad, Yadavalli; Chauhan, DineshSingh (2012). "Dermal cylindroma of the scalp". National Journal of Maxillofacial Surgery. 3 (1). Medknow: 59. doi: 10.4103/0975-5950.102163. ISSN  0975-5950. PMC  3513812.
  3. ^ Friedrich, Reinhard E. (2010-05-01). "Dermal Cylindroma of the Scalp (Turban Tumour) and Subjacent Calvarian Defects". Anticancer Research. 30 (5). International Institute of Anticancer Research: 1793–1797. ISSN  0250-7005. PMID  20592381. Retrieved 2024-04-03.

Further reading



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