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juvenile angiofibroma
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nasal mucosa, nasal tumor, angiofibroma, juvenile, benign nasal tumor, juvenile angiofibroma, benign growth, the back, the nose, upper throat, nasopharynx, tumor contains many blood vessels, juvenile angiofibroma is relatively uncommon, is discovered in adolescent boys, nasal congestion, a visible nasal mass, nosebleeds, epistaxis, the tumor is locally invasive, capable of eroding bone, nosebleeds (epistaxis, frequent, repeated, nasal congestion, difficulty breathing, the nose, nasal discharge, blood tinged, hearing loss, prolonged bleeding , bruising, episodes, frequent, occur repeatedly, recurrent, angiofibroma visible on examination, the nasopharynx, an x-ray, a ct scan, the head, nose area, confirms, angiofibroma, nasal mucosal biopsy indicates tumor, polyp, treatment is required angiofibroma is enlarging, obstructing the airway, causing chronic nosebleeds, no treatment, surgical treatment includes removal, the tumor, removal, difficult, the tumor is unencapsulated, not enclosed) and deeply invasive, recurrence, the tumor after surgical resection is common, clotting, the vessels, the tumor, embolization, tumor to scar, stop bleeding, embolization is performed by injecting a substance, blood vessel to block blood flow, embolization adequate, the nosebleeds, followed by surgery to remove the tumor, not cancerous, angiofibromas, continue to expand, disappear spontaneously, high rate of recurrence after surgical removal, expansion, the angiofibroma, nose, sinuses, structures, anemia from chronic blood loss, pressure on the brain from expansion, the angiofibroma, rare, repeated, frequent nosebleeds occur, no known way, prevent this condition.
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