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Juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (JNA) is a benign but locally aggressive vascular tumor that arises from the posterolateral wall of the nasal cavity, near the sphenopalatine foramen, and primarily affects adolescent males.
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Epidemiology
- Exclusively in adolescent males (typically ages 10–25)
- Accounts for <0.5% of head and neck tumors, but is the most common benign nasopharyngeal tumor in this age group
- Androgen-dependent growth suspected (AR expression, puberty onset)
Etiopathogenesis
- Originates from the fibrovascular stroma of the nasopharyngeal periosteum at the sphenopalatine foramen
- Spreads along natural foramina and fissures:
- Pterygopalatine fossa → infratemporal fossa
- Orbit, nasal cavity, sphenoid sinus
- Cavernous sinus or middle cranial fossa in advanced stages
Other nasopharyngeal angiofibroma associations:
Clinical Features
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JNA classically presents as a painless, progressive unilateral nasal obstruction. The main clinical presentation of JNA is unilateral nasal obstruction with or without epistaxis.
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- Recurrent, spontaneous epistaxis (most common presenting symptom)
- Nasal obstruction
- Facial swelling, proptosis (with orbital extension)