Primary and recurrent inverting papilloma: Appearances with magnetic resonance imaging
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Cited by (19)
Imaging in Otolaryngology
2018, Imaging in OtolaryngologyClinical management of squamous cell carcinoma associated with sinonasal inverted papilloma
2017, Auris Nasus LarynxCitation Excerpt :Patients with sinonasal cancer in the literature often presented with symptom of epistaxis [12]. Preoperative differential diagnosis between IP with or without SCC may be useful in planning the method of surgery [13–15]. However, for SCC associated with IP, the presence of SCC may be unknown until after removal of the entire diseased mucosa, because some patients with SCC associated with IP had no evidence of SCC in their initial biopsy specimens [16].
Diagnostic Imaging: Head and Neck
2017, Diagnostic Imaging: Head and NeckBenign Sinonasal Neoplasms: A Focus on Inverting Papilloma
2006, Otolaryngologic Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :In the setting of IP near the floor of the anterior or middle cranial fossa, the bones of the skull base tend to resemble bone destruction. Unlike the relatively plastic facial bones, it is proposed that the skull base has a limited response to pressure; instead of remodeling, they just appear to erode and radiologically mimic malignancy [41,44] Also, because of the thin and sieve-like nature of the cribriform plate, intracranial extension can occur even without dramatic bony changes on imaging [45]. The association of CT evidence of bony erosion with malignancy in IP is also debated; one study [46] reports this finding in 100% of malignant specimen, while another shows 0% [47].
Sinonasal imaging: Malignant disease
1999, Seminars in Ultrasound CT and MRISinonasal imaging: Anatomy and pathology
1998, Radiologic Clinics of North America