Orthonotes
Orthonotes
by the.bonestories
v3.0 Fusion
v3.0 Fusion
PubMed Narrative Review Evidence Moderate

Contemporary surgical management of osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma.

Pediatric blood & cancer | 2025 | Callan AK, Alexander JH, Montgomery NI, Lindberg AW

In-App Reader

Open Source

Journal and index pages often block iframe embedding. This reader keeps the evidence details in Orthonotes and leaves the source page one click away.

Source
PubMed
Type
Narrative Review
Evidence
Moderate

Abstract

[Indexed for MEDLINE] 12. Injury. 2008 Apr;39(4):395-403. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2007.07.018. Epub 2007 Dec 3. Pathological fractures in primary bone sarcomas. Papagelopoulos PJ(1), Mavrogenis AF, Savvidou OD, Benetos IS, Galanis EC, Soucacos PN. Author information: (1)First Department of Orthopaedics, Athens University Medical School, Athens, Greece. pjp@hol.gr Pathological fractures in patients with primary bone sarcomas should not be considered an absolute indication for amputation. Initial fracture management should include cast immobilisation or external fixation avoiding tumour-cell dissemination. The extent of fracture displacement and the type of fracture stabilisation may affect the outcome of patients with primary bone sarcomas presenting with pathological fractures. Patients with high-grade primary bone sarcomas should be treated by neo-adjuvant chemotherapy, and limb-salvage surgery. Pathological fractures in chemo-resistant primary bone sarcomas are a relative contraindication for limb salvage surgery. DOI: 10.1016/j.injury.2007.07.018

Linked Wiki Topics

This article has not been linked to a wiki topic yet.

Linked Cases

This article has not been linked to a case yet.

Linked Atlases

This article has not been linked to an atlas yet.