Showing posts with label bone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bone. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

55-year-old woman with MGUS and right hip pain



Conventional radiographs show some osteoarthritis.

CT not that impressive

 T1-WI shows fat-containing lesions in bone.

T2-WI with fat suppression shows increased signal within lesion

Due to presumed progression of MGUS to symptomatic myeloma, FDG PET/CT was done

What do you think?
This ended up being sarcoidosis. The PET pattern of symmetric mediastinal and hilar nodes is highly suggestive. Liver involvement would be atypical, but not unheard of for myeloma. Bone disease is certainly typical, but finding fat on MRI in untreated myeloma lesions is not.

Liver was biopsied, showing sarcoid.

Skeletal sarcoidosis:

  • Occurs in 1-13% of patients with Sarcoidosis
  • More common in Black patients 
  • Isolated skeletal involvement is rare
  • 80-90% have concurrent pulmonary involvement
  • Hands and feet are typically most often affected
  • Can be lytic or sclerotic on radiography
  • Can be T1 hyper- or hypo-intense
  • Typically T2-hyperintense
  • Enhances and typically FDG-avid


It's difficult to differentiate skeletal sarcoid from metastasis on imaging. Some features that can help when present are a brush (fuzzy) border characteristics and intralesional lesion fat, features that have near 100% specificity but poor sensitivity (14.3% and 0%, respectively).

Reference:
Moore SL, Kransdorf MJ, Schweitzer ME, Murphey MD, Babb JS. Can sarcoidosis and metastatic bone lesions be reliably differentiated on routine MRI? AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2012 Jun; 198(6):1387-93.




16-year-old with marrow findings on MRI after fall on the wrist


Hi all,

16 year old girl imaged in July after a fall on the wrist. Incidental finding: bone marrow changes in the 2nd to 4th metacarpals and in the proximal phalanx of the 3rd digit. At follow up this month these changes are nearly gone. The girl is asymptomatic. No systemic disease known. Any suggestions?








Saturday, September 7, 2019

Femoral head lesion

F 62, left hip pain. Suspected impingement.

There's a subchondral / subcortical bone lesion at the anterior aspect of the left femoral head with cystic and fatty components, possibly also some calcification.
To me it doesn't look like a typical impingement lesion / herniation pit.
More like cystic degeneration of an intraosseous lipoma, or an LSMFT.

She also has chondropathy with subchondral cysts and mild trochanter bursitis (not shown).

What is your impression?


Thanks,

Andrei


P.S.
I wanted to add a comment to my own post but it seems that's not possible.
As far as I can tell, one can only insert images or videos, no way to attach a powerpoint, pdf etc. If that's correct it would in my opinion be a severe limitation.

OCAD LIVE 2020 Registration is Now Open

Join us for OCAD Live 2020! Saturday, March 28th 10 am - 5 pm UCLA - Santa Monica Orthopaedic Hospital Click HERE to register