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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Bone Tumor Diagnosis,Another view


When we are confronted with a plain film of a bone , we must think about 6 points to narrow the differential diagnosis of the case.
This six clues are as follow:
1-The first clue is to define the pattern of the bone destruction you see,if it is
a-Geographical or
b-Moth eaten or
c-Permeative.
Examples:
a-geographical lesions such as non-ossifying fibroma and esinophilic granuloma.
b-Moth eaten appearance such as
1-myeloma.
2-metastases.
3-lymphoma.
4-ewings sarcoma.
c-Permeative lesion such as Round-cell lesions .
1-Myeloma.
2-Metastases.
3-Lymphoma.
4-Ewing's Sarcoma
5-Leukaemia
6- Neuroblastoma
7-Osteomyelitis
2-The second clue is the location of the lesion,if it is
- In the transverse plane:
a) Central - Enchondroma
b) Eccentric -GCT, osteosarcoma, chondromyxoid fibroma
c) Cortical - Non-ossifying fibroma, osteoid osteoma
d) Parosteal - Parosteal osteosarcoma, osteochondroma
-In the longitudinal plane:
a) Epiphyseal - GCT, chondroblastoma
b) Metaphyseal - Osteomyelitis, osteosarcoma
c) Diaphyseal - Round cell lesions, ABC, enchondroma
3-The third clue is concerning with the type of periosteal reaction, is it unilamelated ( benign) ,multilamelated,perpendicular or with codemen triangle(malignant).
4-Clues by matrix of the lesion,which could be as follow:
a- Ossification (Osteoblastic process) - Well organized ossified mass with fluffy, cotton-like or cloud-like densities. Eg. Osteosarcoma.
b-Calcification (Cartilaginous process)- Unorganized calcified matrix which is comma-shaped, punctate, annular or popcorn-like. Eg. Enchondroma, Chondrosarcoma, Chondromyxoid fibroma.
5-Clues By Density Of Lesion
1. Sclerotic Cortical lesions- Osteoid osteoma- Brodie's abscess- Stress fracture
2. Lytic lesions in children- Eosinophilic granuloma- Neuroblastoma- Leukemia
3. Lytic lesions in adult- Metastatic lesions (Lung, Kidney, Thyroid)- Multiple myeloma- Primary bone tumor
4. Blastic lesion in children- Medulloblastoma- Lymphoma
5. Blastic lesion in adult- Metastatic disease (Breast, Prostate)- Lymphoma- Paget's disease
6. Clues by number of lesion Multiple lesion: More often benignMalignancies with multiple lesions- Metastatic disease- Multiple myeloma- Lymphoma
Summary:
Let us look at the following:
location, pattern,matrix and the density of the lesion,in addition to type of peri-osteal reaction and number of lesions.

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