Title : case 353 |
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Age / Sex : 21 / M Chief complaint: right knee pain for 1 year Courtesy: Lee In Sook (이인숙), Pusan National University Hospital (부산대학교병원) Diagnosis: synovial osteochondromatosis Discussion
Differential Diagnosis: rheumatoid arthritis (rice bodies), extra-skeletal cartilaginous tumors such as chondroma, tumoral calcinosis Diagnosis: synovial osteochondromatosis Discussion: primary synovial (osteo)chondromatosis is a benign disorder in which there is nodular cartilaginous metaplastic proliferation in synovium in joints. Secondary synovial chondromatosis occurs in the setting of other joint disorders such as degenerative osteoarthritis, avascular necrosis, osteochondritis dissecans, trauma/osteochondral fractures, tuberculosis, et al. solitary lesions can occur in both primary and secondary disorders and are referred to as synovial chondromas. They occurs most frequently between the ages of 25 to 65 years, mean 44 years. Also, they can also occur in children and older adults. Intra-articular sites are more common than extra-articular sites (bursae, tendon sheaths). In intra-articular sites, lesions occur in the knee joint (50-70%) > hip, elbow > shoulder > wrist, ankle > small joints > spinal synovial joints. Synovial osteochondromatosis typically appears as multiple nodules of various sizes with varying degrees of mineralization/calcification and ossification on plain radiograph. Large ossified lesions may show bony trabeculation with central radiolucent bone marrow. Small calcifications are seen better with CT than radiographs. Up to 30% of lesions may not show calcifications on radiographs. Non-calcified synovial chondromas may present as circumscribed mass-lesions with or without lobulated margins. The MRI features are dependent on the relative proportions of cartilage, calcified cartilage, and mineralized osseous tissue within the lesions. calcifications results in low signal on T1WI, PDWI, T2WI and FST2WI. Extensive calcifications can appear as lesions with signal void. After Gd-contrast administration, they can show irregular, thin-peripheral and/or septal enhancement. References: 1. Meyers SP. Synovial chondromatosis, and synovial osteochondromatosis. In: MRI of bone and soft tissue tumors and tumorlike lesions: Differential diagnosis and atlas. New York, Thieme 2008:753-757 2. Kramer J, Recht M, Deely DM, et al. MR appearance of idiopathic synovial osteochondromatosis. J Compt Assist Tomogr 1993;17:772-776 3. Kransdorf MJ, Murphey MD. Synovial tumors. In: Imaging of soft tissue tumors 2nd ed. Philadelphia, Pa:W.B. Saunders;2006:381-436 |
Correct Answer | |
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Name | Institution |
이름:소속병원 | |
Total Applicants: 11 | |
Correct answers:3 | |
이승훈: 한양대병원 | |
윤성종: 강동경희대병원 | |
이지현:삼성서울병원 | |
Semicorrect answers:2 | |
김완태:중앙보훈병원 | |
장은호:포항남부보건소 |
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