| Literature DB >> 23194024 |
Maria Silvia Spinelli1, Carlo Perisano, Carlo Della Rocca, Jendrick Hardes, Carlo Barone, Carlo Fabbriciani, Giulio Maccauro.
Abstract
We report the case of a parosteal osteosarcoma of the distal ulna, treated with wide resection without reconstruction. The patient developed lung metastasis and a mass in the interosseus membrane of the forearm proximally to the osteotomy. The lung mass was found to be a metastasis from parosteal osteosarcoma and the biopsy of the forearm mass revealed a myositis ossificans. The suspicion of a recurrence of parosteal osteosarcoma, already metastatic, led to a second wide resection with no reconstruction. A slice of the radial cortex was taken during this second procedure. From a histological point of view, good margins were achieved and diagnosis of myositis ossificans was confirmed. Two months later, a radius fracture occurred and a synthesis, with plate and screws, as added with poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) to reconstruct the bone loss, was performed. Indication of the reconstructive technique and the complication after distal ulna resection in oncologic surgery are discussed in this paper.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23194024 PMCID: PMC3545861 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-10-260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Antero-posterior (a) and lateral (b) view of wrist showing the ossifying mass surrounding the distal ulna.
Figure 2CT scans showing the ossifying mass arising from the cortex without significant bone marrow infiltration.
Figure 3X-rays after distal ulna resection. No mass left in the forearm. The interosseus membrane seems to be free from other ossifying lesions.
Figure 4After 18 months X-rays showed small ossifying mass in the interosseus membrane. It is not clear if there was contact with the bone (a); MRI confirmed the presence of the mass that did not seem to involve the ulna or the radius (b).
Figure 5X-rays (a, b), CT scan (c) and MRI (d) show increased dimensions of the lesion but no contact with the bones after a few weeks.
Figure 6Myositis ossificans low magnification showing mature shell of bone at the periphery and bone trabecule.
Figure 7X-ray image of radius fracture (a) and the radius osteosynthesis with plate, screws and PMMA (b, c).