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Osteochondroma of the Spine

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This patient presented with neck pain,

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and a magnetic resonance imaging study of the cervical

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spine was requested. On the T1-weighted scan,

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we see that there is a bright signal-intensity lesion

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which is compressing the thecal sac from an extradural

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location. It's associated at the 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, C7-T1 level.

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On the T2-weighted scan, the cord is displaced.

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But right now, at least,

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I'd say the signal intensity of the cord is within

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normal limits. It's a little bit narrowed.

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On the STIR image,

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we see that there is suppression of the lesion.

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It's darkened signal intensity as compared

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to the T2 and the T1-weighted scan.

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So this suggests that this lesion contains fat.

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So could this be a strange lipoma?

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One of the hints here is that it does seem to have a rim

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of dark signal intensity. That is probably not related

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to a chemical shift artifact.

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It's present also on the STIR image.

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On the axial scan, maybe we can get a little bit more

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information about the lesion.

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So here we see the abnormality in the extradural

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compartment. And once again,

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it has that low signal intensity rim around the lesion,

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which is bright on the T1-weighted scan,

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identifying this as probably an element of the

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cortex of bone with bright signal intensity.

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Now, we're in a location where we could

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be considering a disc herniation.

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But clearly, disc herniations usually

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do not show fat signal intensity.

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Comparing the post-gadolinium T1-weighted scan

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to the pre-gadolinium T1-weighted scan,

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we didn't really notice any element of enhancement.

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This is post-gad to pre-gad.

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And when we did a subtraction image of the two,

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we weren't convinced that there was enhancement.

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So we were kind of scratching our head wondering what

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this could be other than a piece of bone with bone

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marrow located there. So a CT scan was ordered. Here's

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the CT scan showing, well, what looked like, well

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corticated bone at the C7-T1 level,

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and there was that lower signal intensity

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centrally representing the bone marrow.

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What was critical on the axial scan was the

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demonstration that this does communicate with a

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portion of the bone. It wasn't sitting freely,

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as it looks like here,

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but when you went off to the side,

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it actually was arising from the superior

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facet of the T1 vertebra.

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And this was resected and was an osteochondroma,

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a little benign bone tumor that was arising from the

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superior facet of T1 and compressing the spinal cord.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Spine

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

CT

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