Axial melorheostosis is rare with only few cases reported and even fewer with symptoms. While symptoms secondary to neural foramen or spinal canal stenosis caused by hyperostotic bone are common, only three symptomatic cases of spinal melorheostosis with associated intradural lipomatous lesions have been reported to date. In none of them the fibrous component of lipofibromatous lesion was identified preoperatively on magnetic resonance imaging. We report here a case of 18-year-old male who presented with thoracic myelopathy secondary to widespread spinal melorheostosis associated with extensive intradural lipomatosis and fibrous component in thoracic lipoma, causing tethering of thoracic spinal cord and myelomalacia. The patient was treated with T2 to T9 posterior instrumented stabilization followed by T3 to T8 laminectomy along with selective thoracic lipofibromatous tumor debulking. Detection of the fibromatous component in multilevel extensive intradural lipomatosis associated with melorheostosis is helpful in planning selection of the level of surgical excision and decompression.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-1748883 | DOI Listing |
Arch Orthop Trauma Surg
August 2024
Spine Surgery, Orthopedics, Traumatology, SRH Klinikum Karlsbad, Guttmannstrasse 1, 76307, Karlsbad - Langensteinbach, Germany.
Melorheostosis is a rare dysplastic bone disease that usually affects long bones at the upper or lower limbs. It is rarely seen at the spine and very rarely located at the cervical spine. To the best of our knowledge, there are currently 6 cases of melorheostosis described at the cervical spine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJBJS Case Connect
July 2023
Department of Pathology, Istanbul Medipol University Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul, Turkey.
Case: A 22-year-old female patient was referred to the orthopaedic department for further examination after a radiopaque area was observed in the T6 vertebra in her chest radiograph. Computed Tomography (CT) showed a sclerotic mass with smooth borders, involving the entire body of the T6 vertebra, left posterior elements, posterior of the rib past the left zygapophyseal joint, and a "flowing candle wax" image toward the T7 vertebra. Spinal melorheostosis was considered radiologically in the patient, but malignancy could not be completely excluded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Radiol Imaging
September 2022
Department of Orthopaedics and Spine Surgery, Ganga Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
Axial melorheostosis is rare with only few cases reported and even fewer with symptoms. While symptoms secondary to neural foramen or spinal canal stenosis caused by hyperostotic bone are common, only three symptomatic cases of spinal melorheostosis with associated intradural lipomatous lesions have been reported to date. In none of them the fibrous component of lipofibromatous lesion was identified preoperatively on magnetic resonance imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Imaging Sci
February 2022
Department of Radiology, Watford General Hospital, Watford, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
Melorheostosis is a rare bone dysplasia of unknown etiology with an incidence of 0.9 cases per million. It typically affects the upper or lower limbs and can cause severe deformity and functional impairment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiol Case Rep
November 2020
Department of Radiology, Eastern Virginia Medical School, P.O. Box 1980, Norfolk, VA 23501, USA.
Melorheostosis is a rare sclerosing bone dysplasia that most commonly affects the lower extremity long bones in a sclerotomal distribution. Melorheostosis of the spine is a particularly rare manifestation of this disease. In the appendicular skeleton, melorheostosis has a pathognomonic imaging appearance of flowing hyperostosis resembling melted candle wax flowing down the margins of a candlestick.
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