Roberto Tirabosco
Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital
125 Papers
251 Citations
Roberto Tirabosco is an academic researcher from Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 110 publications.
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Papers
Liposarcomatous differentiation in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor: a case report.
Roberto Tirabosco,Malcolm Galloway,Robert Bradford,Paul O'Donnell,Adrienne M. Flanagan,Adrienne M. Flanagan +5 more
TL;DR: A 63-year-old man was admitted at the emergency department in an acute confusional state, and a computerized tomography scan (CT) revealed hydrocephalus, and despite the rapid introduction of a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt, the patient died soon thereafter.
10
Primary intra-osseous liposarcoma of the femur: a case report.
Simon Macmull,Henry Dushan Edward Atkinson,Srdjan Saso,Roberto Tirabosco,Paul O'Donnell,John A. Skinner +5 more
TL;DR: Tissue diagnosis and multimodal imaging, rather than any single radiological investigation, are important in making the diagnosis of high-grade intra-osseous primary liposarcoma of the proximal femur.
9
High-grade chondrosarcoma mimicking Brodie's abscess.
TL;DR: A case of histopathologically confirmed grade II intramedullary chondrosarcoma of the proximal femur with MRI feature of a positive penumbra sign is described, proven to be a helpful feature in making a diagnosis of infection.
9
Parachordoma of the gastric serosa: report of a myxoid mimicry in an unusual location
TL;DR: The authors address the differential diagnosis of parachordoma and the unusual location of this neoplasm in a 65-year-old woman.
9
An NRAS mutation in a case of Erdheim–Chester disease
Sarah J. Aitken,Nadege Presneau,Roberto Tirabosco,Maria Fernanda Amary,Paul O'Donnell,Adrienne M. Flanagan,Adrienne M. Flanagan +6 more
TL;DR: Routine total submission of pelvic lymphadenectomy specimens removed during radical prostatectomy is probably not cost-effective, and even total submission is not foolproof, and it is quite possible that micrometastases could have been found in some of the negative cases in the study of Perry-Keene et al.