HI,Thank you for all replies.
I got the following responses:
Avneesh Chhabra | ||||||||||||||
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Hemangiomatosis is often associated with lipomatous components.
I am afraid if this girl might develop Gorham disease from now on.
I think that meodermal dysplasia seen in NF1 is a good idea.
Personally, however, I have never seen NF1-related mesodermal dysplasia not associated with neurofibromas.
Soft tissue components in your cases don’t look like neurofibromas.
Lastly, The patient has no signs of NF and has never been diagnosed before as NF. BTW, WBMRI showed no other lesions in the rest of the skeleton. Thanks
Dear All,May I ask your thought on the attached case? Thanks
Regards,
Talaat Youssef