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Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review

A traumatic neuroma occurs at the injury site of a peripheral nerve; however, albeit rarely, this variant of a neuroma can involve a nerve that has not experienced penetrating trauma. A lower extremity amputation stump is the most common location of a traumatic neuroma. Traumatic neuromas may be sym...

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Autores principales: Cohen, Philip R, Calame, Antoanella
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9713604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36465207
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.30957
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author Cohen, Philip R
Calame, Antoanella
author_facet Cohen, Philip R
Calame, Antoanella
author_sort Cohen, Philip R
collection PubMed
description A traumatic neuroma occurs at the injury site of a peripheral nerve; however, albeit rarely, this variant of a neuroma can involve a nerve that has not experienced penetrating trauma. A lower extremity amputation stump is the most common location of a traumatic neuroma. Traumatic neuromas may be symptomatic; tumor-associated pain can be severe and significantly affect the patient’s quality of life. Several hypotheses have been postulated for the pathogenesis of neuroma-related pain, including alpha-smooth muscle actin, neural fiber structural changes, nerve growth factor, and/or sensitization of the affected nerve. In addition to prevention, non-surgical treatment (such as chemical interventions, cryotherapy, neuromodulation, pharmacologic agents, and physiotherapy) and surgical interventions (such as direct nerve repair at the time of injury or ligation of the nerve proximal to the neuroma and various potential methods to minimize subsequent irritation of the distal free end of the proximal nerve) have been used to manage neuroma-associated pain. A traumatic neuroma of the nose is rare. Indeed, it has only been described in three individuals: two women (including the Caucasian woman in this report and a Turkish woman) and one man. The benign tumor was extremely painful in both women; however, the man’s lesion was non-tender. Prior trauma to the nasal site included either a laceration or elective surgery; however, the reported woman did not experience any penetrating trauma to her nose. The diagnosis was established following an excisional (for the man), incisional (for the Turkish woman), or punch (for the Caucasian woman) biopsy. Follow-up was provided for two of the patients. The man’s neuroma had been completely excised, and he never developed tumor-associated tenderness. However, the pain persisted after the biopsy healed for the reported woman whose neuroma was not entirely removed. The explosive and markedly severe character of the reported patient’s lesion-related tenderness prompted us to propose an acronym for this uncommon yet exquisitely painful variant of a neuroma: tender nasal traumatic (TNT) neuroma.
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spelling pubmed-97136042022-12-02 Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review Cohen, Philip R Calame, Antoanella Cureus Family/General Practice A traumatic neuroma occurs at the injury site of a peripheral nerve; however, albeit rarely, this variant of a neuroma can involve a nerve that has not experienced penetrating trauma. A lower extremity amputation stump is the most common location of a traumatic neuroma. Traumatic neuromas may be symptomatic; tumor-associated pain can be severe and significantly affect the patient’s quality of life. Several hypotheses have been postulated for the pathogenesis of neuroma-related pain, including alpha-smooth muscle actin, neural fiber structural changes, nerve growth factor, and/or sensitization of the affected nerve. In addition to prevention, non-surgical treatment (such as chemical interventions, cryotherapy, neuromodulation, pharmacologic agents, and physiotherapy) and surgical interventions (such as direct nerve repair at the time of injury or ligation of the nerve proximal to the neuroma and various potential methods to minimize subsequent irritation of the distal free end of the proximal nerve) have been used to manage neuroma-associated pain. A traumatic neuroma of the nose is rare. Indeed, it has only been described in three individuals: two women (including the Caucasian woman in this report and a Turkish woman) and one man. The benign tumor was extremely painful in both women; however, the man’s lesion was non-tender. Prior trauma to the nasal site included either a laceration or elective surgery; however, the reported woman did not experience any penetrating trauma to her nose. The diagnosis was established following an excisional (for the man), incisional (for the Turkish woman), or punch (for the Caucasian woman) biopsy. Follow-up was provided for two of the patients. The man’s neuroma had been completely excised, and he never developed tumor-associated tenderness. However, the pain persisted after the biopsy healed for the reported woman whose neuroma was not entirely removed. The explosive and markedly severe character of the reported patient’s lesion-related tenderness prompted us to propose an acronym for this uncommon yet exquisitely painful variant of a neuroma: tender nasal traumatic (TNT) neuroma. Cureus 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9713604/ /pubmed/36465207 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.30957 Text en Copyright © 2022, Cohen et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Family/General Practice
Cohen, Philip R
Calame, Antoanella
Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review
title Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review
title_full Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review
title_fullStr Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review
title_full_unstemmed Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review
title_short Tender Nasal Traumatic (TNT) Neuroma: Case Report and Review
title_sort tender nasal traumatic (tnt) neuroma: case report and review
topic Family/General Practice
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9713604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36465207
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.30957
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