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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 6 | Pages 814 - 816
1 Jun 2007
Nawabi DH Sinisi M

Schwannomas are the most common tumours of the sheath of peripheral nerves. The clinical diagnosis is usually straightforward, but may be delayed for many years in a schwannoma of the posterior tibial nerve. The symptoms are often attributed to entrapment neuropathy or to lumbosacral radiculopathy. We describe 25 patients with a schwannoma of the posterior tibial nerve. Only three were diagnosed within a year of presentation. The mean time to diagnosis was 86.5 months with a median of 48 months (2 to 360). All the patients complained of pain, which was felt specifically in the sole of the foot in 18. A Tinel sign was detected in all 25 patients. MRI confirmed the diagnosis in all the cases in which it had been undertaken. Surgical resection of the lesion abolished the neuropathic pain. In patients with a long history of neuropathic pain in the lower limb in whom lumbar and pelvic lesions have been excluded, a benign tumour of the sheath of a peripheral nerve may explain the symptoms. Surgical resection of the tumour is safe and effective


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 5 | Pages 723 - 725
1 Jul 2003
Kwon BC Baek GH Chung MS Lee SH Kim H Oh JH

In this retrospective study, we analysed the clinical features of neurilemoma when it is located in muscle. Twelve patients had an intramuscular neurilemoma as shown on magnetic resonance (MR) scans and confirmed at operation. In six it was located in the upper limb, in five in the lower limb, and in one in the back. The mean age of the patients was 41 years (12 to 58). Nine complained only of a palpable mass and the other three of a mass with slight tenderness. None had neurological symptoms or signs, such as radicular pain, a positive Tinel sign, or motor weakness. There were no postoperative complications or recurrence of the tumour after a mean follow-up of two years (1 to 10)