2018
DOI: 10.1155/2018/6346453
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Two Cases of Cartilaginous Choristoma—Not Chondroma of the Bony External Auditory Canal

Abstract: The presence of a cartilaginous mass on the bony external auditory canal is an unusual finding. Currently, two different diagnoses have been used to describe this type of mass: chondroma and cartilaginous choristoma. There is currently no consensus on which diagnosis is appropriate for this type of lesion. Choristoma is defined as a tumor-like growth of normal tissue occurring in an abnormal location. Histological examination alone cannot be used to distinguish between cartilaginous choristoma and chondroma, a… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…[1][2][3] Furthermore, the incidental finding of such a mass in an anatomic site different from where one would normally expect to find the tissue in question solidifies the label of choristoma. [1][2][3] For choristomas of the EAC, a key differentiating factor is whether the mass originates from the underlying periosteum. 2 A chondroma would be histologically similar (both lesions have normal, nonneoplastic, hyaline cartilage), but it would be in direct contact with the bony portion of the EAC rather than the cartilaginous portion.…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…[1][2][3] Furthermore, the incidental finding of such a mass in an anatomic site different from where one would normally expect to find the tissue in question solidifies the label of choristoma. [1][2][3] For choristomas of the EAC, a key differentiating factor is whether the mass originates from the underlying periosteum. 2 A chondroma would be histologically similar (both lesions have normal, nonneoplastic, hyaline cartilage), but it would be in direct contact with the bony portion of the EAC rather than the cartilaginous portion.…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The new terminology characterizes the lesion better as a tumor-like growth with histologically normal tissue. [1][2][3] Furthermore, the incidental finding of such a mass in an anatomic site different from where one would normally expect to find the tissue in question solidifies the label of choristoma. [1][2][3] For choristomas of the EAC, a key differentiating factor is whether the mass originates from the underlying periosteum.…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%
See 3 more Smart Citations