| Literature DB >> 20844665 |
M Ranadheer1, Santhi Bhushan Murari, N Sujith, Pushpalatha Sudhakar, Vvs Prabhakar Rao.
Abstract
Caffey's disease is not a common clinical occurrence; it often poses problems in diagnosis due to its close resemblance to osteomyelitis. Initial plain radiographic diagnosis is sometimes fraught with the limitation of not being able to differentiate it from chronic osteomyelitis. Skeletal scintigraphy is sensitive in localizing the disease activity to the radiological features of the affected regions and the characteristic location of the lesions helps make the diagnosis without resorting to biopsy and further workup.Entities:
Keywords: 99m Tc MDP skeletal scintigraphy; Caffey's disease; chronic osteomyelitis
Year: 2010 PMID: 20844665 PMCID: PMC2933729 DOI: 10.4103/0972-3919.63595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nucl Med ISSN: 0974-0244
Figure 1X-ray of the skull showing diffuse thickening and increased density of maxilla and mandibles
Figure 2X-ray chest showing bilateral clavicular thickening, sclerosis and overlying soft tissue swelling
Figure 399m Tc MDP skeletal scintigraphy showing diffusely increased uptake in both mandibles, with similar uptake in both clavicles, coinciding with the radiological lesions