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Robot-assisted thoracic surgery for intercostal cavernous hemangioma.

Fumihiro ShojiKoji YamazakiYuka KozumaShigeto KawauchiSadanori Takeo
Published in: Thoracic cancer (2022)
Intercostal cavernous hemangioma is extremely rare among benign vascular tumors. Achieving a definitive diagnosis preoperatively by radiographic examination alone is difficult; surgical resection is usually needed. Occasional cases are found as giant tumors, and some grow substantially during observation without treatment. Such tumors require extended surgical resection; however, small tumors can be completely resected by tumor extirpation alone. Thus, immediate surgical resection while the tumor is small might help to avoid invasive surgery. We herein describe cases of intercostal cavernous hemangioma with no invasion to the surrounding tissues, successfully treated by complete tumor resection using robot-assisted thoracic surgery.
Keyphrases
  • thoracic surgery
  • robot assisted
  • minimally invasive
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • coronary artery disease
  • cell migration
  • smoking cessation