![]() |
JOURNAL TOOLS |
Opzioni di pubblicazione |
eTOC |
Per abbonarsi |
Sottometti un articolo |
Segnala alla tua biblioteca |
ARTICLE TOOLS |
Publication history |
Estratti |
Permessi |
Per citare questo articolo |
Share |


I TUOI DATI
I TUOI ORDINI
CESTINO ACQUISTI
N. prodotti: 0
Totale ordine: € 0,00
COME ORDINARE
I TUOI ABBONAMENTI
I TUOI ARTICOLI
I TUOI EBOOK
COUPON
ACCESSIBILITÀ
CASE REPORT
Otorinolaringologia 2019 March;69(1):53-6
DOI: 10.23736/S0392-6621.18.02173-2
Copyright © 2018 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA
lingua: Inglese
Giant cervical chordoma
Mauro MAGNANO 1, 2, Paolo BOFFANO 1, 2 ✉, Marco ANDREIS 1, 2, Matteo BRUCOLI 3, Rodolfo BENECH 3, Arnaldo BENECH 3
1 Division of Otolaryngology, Hospital of Pinerolo, ASL TO3 Collegno and Pinerolo, Turin, Italy; 2 Division of Otolaryngology, Hospital of Rivoli, ASL TO3 Collegno and Pinerolo, Turin, Italy; 3 University of Eastern Piedmont, Novara, Italy
Chordoma is a locally aggressive tumor that can arise anywhere along the central neural axis, originating from the embryonic notochord remnant. Chordomas tend to be slow growing tumors; they often become symptomatic at relatively later stages, with cervical clinical manifestations related to mass effect including neck pain, shoulder weakness, dysphagia, and dysphonia. In fact, they are often accidentally discovered during investigation of cervical pain or radiculopathy. While rare, chordomas are important to recognize as they can be easily confused for other more common entities with different treatments and prognoses. We present the case of a 78-year-old man who was diagnosed with a giant cervical chordoma.
KEY WORDS: Chordoma - Diagnosis - Neoplasms