Abstract

Intraosseous hemangiomas are benign vascular tumors that are encountered most commonly in the vertebrae and rarely in the skull. Primary intraosseus hemangiomas of the skull are extremely rare. Here, we report a patient with an incidental finding on magnetic resonance imaging of an intraosseous hemangioma lesion in the right parietal bone. We present this case because it is primary and rare, but more importantly, at surgery, it was found that these lesions infiltrated the local dura mater and subcutaneous tissue that was inconsistent with the benign concept.

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