“…Cartilage-forming Tumors tionally, a chondroblastoma may metastasize to the lungs as a benign tumor, as reported by Green and Whittaker (1975), , Riddell et al (1973), and mentioned by , who has seen pulmonary specimens, from four such benign metastasizing tumors, although none occurred in the Mayo Clinic series of 44 cases. The few cases reported in the literature as myxomas or myxofibromas (Bauer and Harell 1954;Scaglietti and Stringa 1956;Marcove et al 1964;Perou et al 1967;McLure and Dahlin 1977) are probably mostly chondromyxoid fibromas, because myxomas of bone seem to be peculiar to the jaws and of odontogenic origin, and apparently have no counterpart or at least are exceptional in other bones of the skeleton. Chondromyxoid fibroma, which is the least common benign tumor of cartilage derivation, was described in 1948 by Jaffe and Lichtenstein as a distinctive entity; it was formerly regarded as a myxoma (Bloodgood 1924) or a myxomatous variant of giant-cell tumor, or mistaken for a malignant lesion, especially chondrosarcoma, chondromyxosarcoma, or myxosarcoma (Ottolenghi and Petracchi 1953).…”