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Infantile digital fibromatosis (IDF), also termed inclusion body fibromatosis or Reye's tumor, usually occurs as a single, small, asymptomatic, nodule in the dermis on a finger or toe [1] of infants and young children. [2] IMF is a rare disorder with approximately 200 cases reported in the medical literature as of 2021. [3]
Juvenile hyaline fibromatosis, also termed fibromatosis hyalinica multiplex juvenilis and the Murray–Puretic–Drescher syndrome, an autosomal recessive inherited genetic disease. [9] Infantile digital fibromatosis, also termed inclusion body fibromatosis [10] or Reye tumor [11] Fibroma of tendon sheath [12]
Subtypes of juvenile fibromatosis include: [3] Infantile myofibromatosis: solitary tumors commonly occurring in the head and neck regions; multiple tumors occurring in the skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscles, and/or less commonly bones; or, rarely, tumors occurring in an internal organ(s). [4] Aponeurotic fibroma; Infantile digital fibromatosis
Infantile digital fibromatosis; Infantile digital myofibroblastoma; Infantile hemangioma; Infantile hemangiopericytoma; Infantile kaposiform hemangioendothelioma;
Fibrous hamartoma of infancy is generally a benign tumor but may be locally aggressive, [7] locally infiltration, [8] and in uncommon cases produce symptoms such as tenderness. [9] Surgical excision is the treatment of choice for FHI tumors.
Diffuse infantile fibromatosis is a rare condition affecting infants during the first three years of life. This condition is a multicentric infiltration of muscle fibers with fibroblasts resembling those seen in aponeurotic fibromas, presenting as lesions and tumors confined usually to the muscles of the arms, neck, and shoulder area [1]: 607 Diffuse infantile fibromatosis is characterized by ...
Infantile digital fibromatosis (inclusion body fibromatosis, infantile digital myofibroblastoma, Reye tumor) Infantile hemangiopericytoma (congenital hemangiopericytoma) Infantile myofibromatosis (congenital generalized fibromatosis, congenital multicentric fibromatosis) Infantile systemic hyalinosis (juvenile systemic hyalinosis)
Infantile digital fibromatosis This page was last edited on 21 January 2021, at 13:57 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...