| Literature DB >> 24324905 |
Ali Al Kaissi1, Rudolf Ganger, Klaus Klaushofer, Franz Grill.
Abstract
We report on a 13-year-old boy who presented with multiple hereditary exostosis and had development of back pain, associated with neurological deficits, and was found to have exostoses in the spinal canal. Spine radiograph showed a cauliflower-like abnormality of multiple exostoses of the posterior arch (pedicle) of the thoracic vertebrae (T3-5). Reformatted CT scanning revealed the simultaneous development of intra- and extraspinal osteochondromatosis of T3-5. The spinal cord was compressed by the intraspinal exostosis. Our patient was surgically treated for intraspinal exostoses and showed cessation of neurological deficits. We report what might be a rare association of spinal cord compression in a patient with multiple hereditary exostoses.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24324905 PMCID: PMC3844191 DOI: 10.1155/2013/758168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Orthop ISSN: 2090-6757
Figure 1Conventional radiograph showed large cauliflower mass projecting along the anterolateral aspect of the spine.
Figure 2Reformatted sagittal CT scan showed a lesion arising from the T3–5 lamina and indenting the spinal cord (obliteration and stenosis of the spinal canal at the level of T3).
Figure 3Axial CT of T3 scan showed the extent of the involvement of the left lamina and compression of the cord. The cauliflower appearance corresponds to the ossified matrix of the osteochondroma (huge intraspinal mass with heterogeneous density). This ossified matrix is surrounded by cartilage tissue, the osseous tumour originating from the left T3–5 facet joint (arrows).
Figure 4Coronal reformatted CT scan image showed a huge intraspinal mass with heterogeneous intensity. The ossified matrix is surrounded by cartilage tissue. The osseous tumour originating from the left T3–5 facet joint (arrows-arrow head is the pedicle and long arrow is the exostosis).