Weekly Case

Title : Case 103

Age / Sex : 29 / M



Age / Sex : 29/M



Chief complaint :
Multiple joint contracture (gradual development over 6 years)




1) What is your impression?

Two weeks later, you can see the final diagnosis with a brief discussion of this case.

* Send Application Answers to Ja-Young Choi, MD ([email protected])

Courtesy :Jae Sung Myung, MD., Korea
University Guro Hospital


Diagnosis:

Myositis Ossificans progressiva (= fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva)



Discussion


Findings:


Bilateral Hallux valgus, Short both 1st metacarpals and both 1st & 4th metatarsals, Bilateral Phalangeal synostosis (monophalangeal great toe)


extensive interspinous,supraspinous lig. ossification


exuberant soft tissue ossification at Lt. scapula~ supraspinous ossification at Lt. lower trunk


Rt. prox. tibial metaphyseal pseudoexostosis


Soft tissue ossification at Rt. Distal humerus post. aspect


 


Diagnosis:  


Myositis Ossificans progressiva (= fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva)


 


Discussion:


         Epidemiology/Etiology/clinical manifestation


- Extremely rare (1/10million) AD disorder characterized by skeletal malformation and progressive, disabling heterotopic osteogenesis


-  Excessive stimulation of bone morphogenic protein 4 and its mRNA


-  Painful lumps and stiffness in the adjoining joint. Lumps decrease in a few weeks, but joint mobility reduction persists.


-  Exacerbating factors for ossifications at new sites includes sometimes very minor trauma, such as vein puncture, biopsy of lumps, IM injections, dental treatments, and excision of masses.


-  Ossification progresses from proximal to distal and cranial to caudal.


: Variations in bone maturation sequence


: Increased incidence of enchondromas


         Consideration in management and prognosis


- Once diagnosis is established, usually clinically, any surgical biopsy is contraindicated.


-  Early death is inevitable d/t respiratory failure with chest wall contracture, starvation with ossification of masseter muscles. 


          Radiographic findings


- The first radiographic finding is a soft tissue mass. The lesion gradually shrinks in size and ossifies. The final appearance of the lesion may be that of a cylindrical column of solid new bone replacing the entire muscle of the neck or extremities.


- The zonal phenomenon, characteristic of myositis ossificans cirvumscripta, is not present in progressive case.


- Ossification progresses from proximal to distal and cranial to caudal.


: Digital anomalies are present at birth


Hallux valgus, short metacarpals and metatarsals, Phalangeal synostosis (eg, monophalangeal great toe)


: Vertebral fusions, vertebral anomalies (ie, small bodies), pedicle thickening


: Ossification of inter and supraspinous ligament


: Broad, short femoral neck


: Bilateral thickening of medial cortex of tibia


        - MRI findings depend on the age of the lesion.


: In immature lesions, T2-weighted spin-echo images are associated with a homogeneous soft tissue mass with increased signal intensity. Surrounding edema may be seen in lesions less than a few months old. In T1-weighted images, only mass effect may be noted with displacement of fascial planes.


: Mature lesions appear as inhomogeneous masses with fatlike signal intensity on both T1- and T2-weighted images.


 


Differential diagnosis


 Metastatic calcification


 Systemic diseases related to multicentric area of myositis ossificans circumscripta including tetany, paraplegia, and burns.


 


References:


 D. Resnick. Diagnosis of Bone and Joint Disorders. 4th Ed. Saunders Press, 2002: 4409-4415



Correct Answer
Name Institution
Total Applicants (8)
Correct Answer (5)
김완태: 서울보훈병원
김성준: 영동세브란스병원
이승훈: 서울보훈병원
임채헌: 국군춘천병원
채지원: 서울대병원
Semicorrect Answer (1)
박소영: 분당서울대병원

Comment
    • Weekly Cases

    • 관련 동영상

    • 집담회 증례