| Literature DB >> 26915005 |
Kumar Kaushik Dash1, Piyush Vishwas Gavai2, Roshan Wade3, Amyn Rajani4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the advent of MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging), Synovial lesions around knee are being more and more easily detected. Synovial lesions of knee present with boggy swelling, effusion, pain, and restriction of motion. Differential diagnoses of such lesions include pigmented villonodular synovitis, synovial lipoma, synovial chondromatosis, rheumatoid arthritis, synovial hemangioma, amyloid arthropathy, xanthomata and lipoma arborescens. CT and MRI often help in diagnosis of such lesions. MRI of Lipoma Arborescens has been regarded to have characteristic diagnostic appearance - it includes a synovial mass with frond-like architecture and fat signal intensity on all pulse sequences. Sometimes Lipoma Arborescens can present in conjunction with inflammatory arthritis. Synovectomy is often curative for such conditions.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26915005 PMCID: PMC4731382 DOI: 10.1186/s40634-016-0039-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Orthop ISSN: 2197-1153
Fig. 1MRI Picture, Gross Appearance & Histopathological Impression of Lipoma Arborescens: clockwise from top left (villous like projection in the synovium of suprapatellar pouch with signal density characteristic of fat; photograph showing villous architecture of synovium, histomicrograph demonstrating adipose tissue in the subsynovium leading to villous expansion of the synovium. [Source: Kloen et al, Lipoma Arborescens of the Knee. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (Br) 1998:80-B, 298-301] (Kloen et al. 1998)
Fig. 2MRI Image of Knee showing Frond-like synovial proliferative growth (Case 1) clockwise from top left (transverse image showing synovial proliferation around distal femur; transverse image showing synovial effusion in suprapatellar pouch; coronal image showing frond like proliferation both medially and laterally; sagittal image showing involvement of patellofemoral space and posterior capsular region
Fig. 3Arthroscopic image of synovial growth, showing frond like synovial proliferation extending in to tibiofemoral space (Case 1)
Fig. 4Histopathology reports showing fibrocollagenous tissue with dense mixed inflammatory infiltrate comprised of lymphocytes, plasma cells, neutrophils and proliferative blood vessels. There was no fat infiltration in the synovial tissue
Fig. 5Histopathology reports showing lack of any fat infiltration in the synovial tissue
Fig. 6Arthroscopic image of synovial growth, showing villi like proliferation (Case 2)
Fig. 7Clinical photograph of bilateral knee joint swelling
Fig. 8Loose body retrieved arthroscopically (Case 3)
Fig. 9Histopathology revealing hyalinised fibrous nodular mass, with underlying stroma showing an organized hematoma (Case 3)
Summary of all three cases
| Case | Age & gender | Symptoms | Physical findings | MRI findings | Treatment and arthroscopy findings | Original diagnosis | Definitive histopathological findings | Final result & follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 28/Male | Swelling since 2 and a half years with dull aching pain | Knee effusion with boggy swelling. No joint line tenderness. No Instability, | MRI - Frond like synovial growth pattern characteristic of Lipoma Arborescens. Focal marrow edema in intercondylar notch and medial femoral condyle. Moderate synovial effusion | Synovial hypertrophy with branching frond-like pattern noted. Synovectomy done. | Lipoma Arborescens | Fibrocollagenous tissue with dense mixed inflammatory infiltrate comprised of lymphocytes, plasma cells, neutrophils and proliferative blood vessels. | Patient is being treated for Chronic Inflammatory Synovitis. |
| 2 | 22/Male | Dull aching pain and swelling. | Effusion and boggy swelling. | Frond like branching synovial proliferation. Knee effusion. | Frond-like branching synovial growth. Synovectomy done. | Lipoma Arborescens | Inflammatory infiltrate in synovium, with absence of adipose tissue proliferation in subsynovial layer. | Patient is being treated for Chronic inflammatory synovitis. |
| 3 | 37/Male | Pain, Swelling, occasional locking of knee. | Minimal effusion. No tenderness. No instability. | Minimal joint effusion, with a rounded hypointese body in suprapatellar bursa (17 x 16 x 7 mm) suggestive of a focus of nodular synovitis. | White, glistening loose body appearing like a cartilaginous tissue. Loose body removal done. | Unclear Diagnosis. Differentials included Nodular Synovitis or Cartilage injury. | Hyalinised fibrous nodular mass, with underlying stroma showing an organized hematoma | Patient has no complaints at present after removal of the loose body. |