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Abstract:
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  1. Fathinul Fikri, A.S., Ramdave Shakher, Abdul Jalil, N.
    MyJurnal
    The presence of calcification in a particular FDG-avid soft tissue lesion may at times present uncertainty
    regarding the clinical course of the disease pathology. Calcific deposits are not specific for either benign
    or malignant aetiologies (Brant et al., 2010). Altered glucose metabolism with associated calcification
    may underpin underlying aggressive pathophysiology with necrosis as sequelae. Mantle Cell Lymphoma
    (MCL) is a subtype of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. It is a rare B-cell NHL that is prevalent in men over
    the age of 60. The disease may be aggressive but it can also behave in a more indolent fashion in some
    patients. MCL comprises about 5% of all NHLs. The disease is called Mantle Cell Lymphoma because the
    tumour cells originally come from the ‘mantle zone’ of the lymph node (Zhou et al., 2004). Pretreatment
    Hodgkin’s lymphoma with calcification may masquerade as other second primary pathologies, e.g.
    extraosseous osteosarcoma or myositis ossificans (Apter et al., 2002; Korek-Amorosa et al., 1974). A
    calcified perineural lymphoma prior to treatment is exceedingly rare and calcification usually occurs
    one to five years after chemotherapy or radiation therapy with an incidence of 2% (Apter et al., 2002).
    This case documents how the manifestation of a rare malignant perineural mantle cell lymphoma may
    be indistinguishable from other pathological entities based on its pattern of distribution in a combined
    FDG- PET-CT study.
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