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1: Lung Cancer. 2001 Feb-Mar;31(2-3):325-9.Click here to read Links

Benign solitary fibrous tumor of the parietal pleura which invaded the intercostal muscle.

First Department of Surgery, Showa University School of Medicine, 1-5-8 Hatanodai, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 142-8666, Japan.

A 29-year-old woman who underwent evaluation for a 3-month history of left-sided back pain proved to have a left pleural tumor accompanied by a bloody pleural effusion (cytological class II). Three years previously, a chest roentgenogram had been normal. The tumor originated from the parietal pleura at the level of the first three intercostal muscles and was excised completely in continuity with these muscles, including a margin of normal muscle. The tumor measured 15x12 cm and the pathologic diagnosis was benign solitary fibrous tumor; while the tumor invaded the intercostal muscles, no histologically malignant features were present. Long-term follow-up is planned because a possibility of local recurrence exists.

PMID: 11165414 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]