1 / 33

Xray Rounds - A Hole in the Bone

Xray Rounds - A Hole in the Bone. Robbie N Drummond October 31, 2002. Overview. Hole found on xray incidental vs presenting symptom metastases, benign lesions, malignancies : some basic criteria the impending fracture. What do we do when a test we order brings up an incidental finding

Rita
Download Presentation

Xray Rounds - A Hole in the Bone

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Xray Rounds - A Hole in the Bone Robbie N Drummond October 31, 2002

  2. Overview • Hole found on xray incidental vs presenting symptom • metastases, benign lesions, malignancies : • some basic criteria • the impending fracture

  3. What do we do when a test we order brings up an incidental finding • Diagnosis made my combination of primary care physician, radiologist, interventional radiologist, histopathologist, oncologist and orthopod • no definitive pathognomonic findings for specific lesions • our role to initiate diagnosis and slant treatment

  4. Is the Lesion infective or neoplastic? • Is the Lesion benign or malignant? • Is it a primary or secondary lesion? • Is the tumour creating or destroying bone? • Is the cortex of the bone intact, broken or eroded

  5. Five basic presentations of hole in bone • 1 benign bone tumour • 2 malignant bone tumour • 3 metasastases • 4 non-tumour • 5 infection

  6. Age • Osteosarcoma and most malignant tumours are tumours of child hood • Any invasive lesion < 40 Sarcoma • any invasive lesion > 40 Metastasis

  7. Location of Common Tumours

  8. Benign Tumours • Intact cortex • usually solitary • enlarges by expansion and pressure... Slowly • the margin is sharp geographic • narrow zone of transition • if part of lesion looks benign whole lesion usually is • periosteum not affected

  9. Benign Tumour - Chondromyxoid Fibroma

  10. Chondromyxoid Fibroma • Uncommon benign tumour • found in proximal tibial metaphyses • sharply marginated lytic zone of destruction • sclerotic rim of bone

  11. Malignant Tumours • Moth -eaten leading to permeative pattern • wide zone of transition ill-defined lucencies • small ill-defined lesions • periosteum involved • often soft-tissueinvolvement

  12. OsteoSarcoma

  13. OsteoSarcoma • Third most common malignancy found in children • 2,500 new cases a year in USA • metaphyses usually in femur proximal tibia • can develop in any bone at any age • mixed sclerotic and lytic lesion • periosteal and soft tissuechanges • almost always solitary

  14. X-ray Findings • Sclerosis visible as a cloudy density • variable pattern • permeative moth-eaten pattern • often periosteal involvement as in onion-skin change of • Ewings Tumour

  15. Osteomyelitis

  16. Metastases • 2,000,000 new cancers a year in USA • half metastasize to bone • only 8,000 new cases of primary bone cancer a year • often metastasis is first presentation of cancer • 50 % of bone gone before found on xray • hallmark multiple bony lesions (found on bone scan)

  17. Thyroid Metastasis to Femur (note Codman’s triangle)

  18. X-ray Appearance • Metastasis shows poor margination • aggressive looking • variable pattern with soft tissue extension • periosteal reaction • can be lytic, blastic or combined

  19. Mets from the Breast

  20. Tumours With Predilection for Spread to Bone • Prostate 32% blastic goes to pelvis • Breast 22% lytic prone to fractures long bones • Kidney 16% lytic aggressive long bones • Lung lytic can go to hands and feet • Thyroid usually solitary and lytic

  21. Bone Metastases from breast

  22. Bone Cysts • Implies hollow often filled with fluid tissue • circumferential thinned and slightly expanded cortex • no periosteal involvement • most are asymptomatic • 2/3 found after pathological fracture • children, boys more than girls • proximal humerus and femur 90% • calcaneus and ileum in adults • multiple cysts rare

  23. Xray Appearance • Arise centrally in bone • thinning of overlying cortex • ovoid, symmetrical • most in metaphysis • parallel to axis of bone • geographic and sclerotic margins

  24. Treatment • Curretage • insertion of bone chips • methylprednisolone • usually never recur

  25. Expanding Aneurysmal Bone Cyst

  26. Bone Cyst With Fallen Fragment

  27. Benign Bone Cyst

  28. The Impending Fracture • Osteolytic more prone than osteoblastic or mixed • areas of high stress - femur humerus • site of endosteal or periosteal resorption with cortical thinning • extending more than 50 -75% of original thickness • interruption in longitudinal or coronal plane > 50% diameter • lesions > 2.5 cm in femur • persistent pain on weight-bearing despite treatment • can be prevented by change in activity, prophylactic pinning, radiation therapy

  29. The Impending Fracture

  30. The Impending Fracture

  31. Mirels Risk Score pathological # • RISK SCORE • VARIABLE 1 2 3 • Site upper limb lower limb peritrochanter • Pain mild moderate severe • Lesion Blastic mixed lytic • Size <1/3 1/3 -2/3 >2/3 (diameter) • fracture likely > 10 unlikely < 7

  32. Conclusions • We as primary care physicians should be able to initiate the process of diagnosis in lesions found in bone. • Should be able to differentiate between benign and malignant lesions, primary and secondary lesions and should have some knowledge of non tumourous lesions • should be able to start to advise the patient on the severity of their disease • with the help of the pathological fracture scale decide which patient can benefit from prophylactic surgery

More Related