| Literature DB >> 25880917 |
Victoria Ohla1,2, Ahmed B Bayoumi2, Markus Hefty3, Matthew Anderson3, Ekkehard M Kasper4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gorham's disease is a rare osteolytic disorder characterized by progressive resorption of bone and replacement of osseous matrix by a proliferative non-neoplastic vascular or lymphatic tissue. A standardized treatment protocol has not yet been defined due to the unpredictable natural history of the disease and variable clinical presentations. No single treatment has proven to be superior in arresting the course of the disease. Trials have included surgery, radiation and medical therapies using drugs such as calcium salts, vitamin D supplements and hormones. We report on our advantageous experience in the management of this osteolyic disorder in a case when it affected only the skull vault. A brief review of pertinent literature about Gorham's disease with skull involvement is provided. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25880917 PMCID: PMC4365769 DOI: 10.1186/s12893-015-0014-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Figure 1Plain skull films as obtained from CT-scouts: (A) Anteroposterior and (B) lateral projections show the skull preoperatively together with a view C) of the upper cervical spine (lateral view). No other lesions were evident, nor did we observe cervical fractures or misalignment. Sagittal and coronal sutures are visible.
Figure 2Preoperative images. A. and B. Preoperative CT of the skull bone window axial and coronal respectively showing frontparietotemporal bone thinning, erosion and defect. C. and D. Preoperative MRI brain T1-WI with contrast showing the marginal enhancement. E. and F. CT skull with 3D reconstruction showing the variable degrees of osteolysis from outside and inside respectively.
Figure 3Postoperative CT skull images following excision and reconstruction. A) axial view of bone window, B) coronal view of bone window and C) CT skull with 3D reconstruction.
Figure 4Preoperative planning. A. Variable densities of the resorbed bone are illustrated in different colors based upon CT. B. The measurements of the expected bone defect after removal of all regions (1, 2 and 3) giving an area of 90 × 110 mm which is the size of the designed implant synthetic bone flap. C. The expected final design of the bone flap replacing the defect and preserving the same skull contour.
Figure 5Intraoperative images. A. Exposure of the bony lesion following temporalis muscle separation. B. Final view following surgical excision and reconstruction using a synthetic bone flap fixed to the surrounding apparently healthy bone with miniplates and screws.
Figure 6Histopathology. A) Replacement of bone by fibrous tissue with variable amount of collagen deposition and vascularity. (H&E, 10X objective) B) Presence of marked number of thin-walled vessels next to an area of active bone resorption. The blood vessels are predominantly capillaries, but smaller arterioles and venules are also seen. (H&E, 10X objective) C) Bone replacement by dense fibrous tissue with occasional small blood vessels. (H&E, 10X objective) D) Patchy area of chronic inflammatory infiltration with scattered foamy macrophages. (H&E, 40X objective).
Review of reported cases of cranial involvement in Gorham’s syndrome
| Reference | Age of onset | Gender | Location | Symptoms | Treatment | F/U outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chiang et al. [ | 46 | Male | Occipital bone | No neurol. Symptoms. | - | - |
| Wildförster et al. [ | - | female | Squamofrontal | No neurol. symptoms | - | |
| Zhang et al. [ | 40 | Male | Parietooccipital region | No neurol. symptoms | Stable | |
| Kawasaki et al. [ | 29 | Female | Left temporal bone, facial mandibular and vertebral bones | Pain, hoarsenes, swallowing disturbace, postural instability of the neck and associated dyspnea and dysphagia, deafness and dumbness, left facial palsy, loss of vision | At age 34 years radiation therapy (total, 31 Gy) was performed. At age 35 years, further irradiation of the skull base (total, 28 Gy) was tried, but the osteolytic lesion expanded further. At the age of 36 years posterior cranio-vertebral fixation, tracheotomy and gastrostomy were performed because of postural instability of the neck and | Death |
| Chai et al. [ | 38 | Male | Fronto-parietal | - | Cranioplasty | |
| Lo et al. [ | 23 | Male | Left parietal region | No neurol. symptoms | Left parietal craniectomy was performed, Reconstructive surgery with artificial bone graft will be scheduled in the next hospital course, 3 months. | Stable |
| Papeix et al. [ | 40 | Male | Parietal pone | No neurol. symptoms | Radiotherapy and surgery | - |
| Rao et al. [ | 20 | Female | Left parietal bone | No neurol. symptoms | - | - |
| Frankel et al. [ | 14 | Female | Calvarium | Rhinorrhoe, sensorineural hearing loss, immobile left palate, atrophy of the left side of the tongue with fasciculations | 2340 cGy in 13 fractions | 12 months, stabilisation and sclerosis |
| Hasegawa et al. [ | 49 | Male | Left parietal bone | Headache | Surgery | - |
| Parihar et al. [ | 35 | Female | Left parietal bone | No neurol. Symtoms | Left parietal craniotomy, cranioplasty | - |
| Iyer et al. [ | 58 | Female | Frontal bone | Headache, vomiting, delirium, rhinorrhoea, meningitis | Pt. refused surgery | - |
| Girisha et al. [ | 16 months | Female | Calvaria | Developmental delay, failure to thrive | - | - |
| Kurczynski et al. [ | 14 | Female | Left orbit, zygoma, mandible, sphenoid, and occiput | Left enophthalmia | Radiotherapy with 2000 rad to the entire skull, mandible, and upper cervical vertebrae | 24 months, no further progression, slight remineralization |
| Khorsovi et al. [ | 62 | Male | Occipital bone | No neurol. symptoms | Total of 4000cGy | 24 months, arrest of disease process with new bone formation |
| Mawk et al. [ | 7 | Male | Right skull base and cervical spine | Neck pain, lymphatic fluid within middle ear spaces and paranasal sinuses. | Surgery, 4140 cGy | 3 months, no clinical or radiological progression |
| Plontke et al. [ | 54 | Female | Skull Base | Right hearing loss | Cranio-cervical stabilisation, radiation total 30,6 Gy | 8 months, no clinical or radiological progression |
| Girn et al. [ | 2 | Female | Skull base | Clinical signs mimicking raised intracranial pres- sure and deafness | Halo application disease process did not respond to palmidronate and radiotherapy ( Five courses of radiotherapy with a dose of 35Gys in 20 fractions) | Continuous disease process, death |
| Schiel et al. [ | 14 | Female | Posterior wall of the maxillary sinus, the orbit and base of the skull as fas as the apwx of the os petrosus | Right maxillary pain | Removal of right palatal mucoperiosteum and 40 Gy total | 77 months, No evidence of further bone lysis |
| Hernández-Marqués et al. [ | 2 | Male | Temporal bone | Secondary cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage | Patient required two surgical interventions. The second intervention included mastectomy and placement of a patch and a lumbar drainage device during 50 days, after which the leakage ceased | - |
| Mowry et al. [ | 29 | Female | Left temporal bone | Intermittent aural fullness, egophony, tinnitus bilaterally | - | - |
| Tsutsumi et al. [ | 82 | Female | Bilateraly parietal regions | Painless scalp depressions | Open biopsy for histological verification | - |