Clinical Example: Subungual Glomus Tumor Cases

Glomus tumors are often subungual, and may involve the bone as a cortical radiolucent impression with mild cortical sclerosis. They lie deep to the nail bed and, once exposed, are easily separated from both the undersurface of the matrix and the bone. They may be excised by splitting the nail bed, but this may result in a split nail deformity if extended into the germinal matrix. A lateral approach, shown here, allows full access to the undersurface of the entire nail matrix. Another case is shown here.
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Case 1.
Xrays of a painful glomus tumor of many years duration, showing a local impression extending through the dorsal and palmar cortices of the distal phalanx.
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Exposure through a lateral approach, lifting the entire nail complex en bloc.
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Appearance three months postop.
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Bone defect filling in some at this time.
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Case 2.
Dorsal cortical impression suggesting bilobed tumor.
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Ill defined bluish discoloration of the proximal nail bed.
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Lateral incision. It is important to plan this incision to leave 3 or 4 millimeters of lateral eponychial skin to avoid breaching the lateral eponychial nail recess, which may result in a chronic skin sinus.
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Tumor excised, exposing the bilobed dorsal cortical impression.
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Appearance 3 months postop.
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Case 3.
Pinpoint tenderness at the proximal border of the germinal matrix is marked with a small circle. An eponychial splitting incision was used, but the lateral incision shown above would have been an equally appropriate.
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Tumor excised, forceps pointing to the area it was found, at the distal collateral ligament attachment. Because of possible involvement, the collateral ligament was also excised.
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