Cancer is unquestionably doubt one of the diseases for which medicine is the most helpless and delayed in its treatment, and until the 1970s, the treatment protocol for skeletal tumors was no different from that utilized in the Middle Ages. However, advancements in orthopedic surgery over the last 40 years have lowered our anxiety of this disease day by day.
Patients may present to an orthopedist with pain, a mass, or aberrant radiologic findings discovered during an unrelated problem assessment. Pain is the most common symptom among people with bone tumors. Although pain is commonly related with movement at first, patients with malignant bone tumors frequently complain of growing pain at rest and at night.
Bone tumors are classified into two types: benign (benign) and malignant (cancerous) (malignant). When discussing common benign bone cancers, osteoblastoma should come first.