Abstract
Differential diagnosis of pathological intracranial calcifications in patients with microcephaly related to congenital Zika virus infection.
Highlights
LCNC in the paranasal sinus is a rare presentation
The evaluation of metastases should not rely on functional studies alone, because LCNC metastasis may lack octreotide/ somatostatin uptake[13]
Differential diagnosis of pathological intracranial calcifications in patients with microcephaly related to congenital Zika virus infection
Summary
LCNC in the paranasal sinus is a rare presentation. The first case in the sinonasal region was described in 1982. Zhou et al found that 81% of neuroendocrine carcinomas were at least stage T3 on presentation[11]. 6. Ferlito A, Strojan P, Lewis JS Jr, et al Large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the head and neck: a distinct clinicopathologic entity.
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