| Literature DB >> 27307926 |
Michael J J Kim, Lawrence A Rinsky, John D MacKenzie.
Abstract
We present a case of a scapular stress fracture in a 17-year-old athletic male that was initially thought to be a neoplasm. Radiographs showed a lesion at the neck of the glenoid with aggressive features. A subsequent MRI and bone scan supported a diagnosis of either tumor or infection. However, before a scheduled bone biopsy, a screening chest CT for pulmonary metastases revealed features of a healing stress fracture. The patient ceased intense athletic activity and four weeks later experienced a continued decrease in shoulder symptoms. A followup shoulder CT confirmed a healing fracture. This case illustrates how a stress fracture at an uncommon location may mimic a neoplasm. CT provides complementary information to radiography and MRI and helps establish a definitive diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2015 PMID: 27307926 PMCID: PMC4899883 DOI: 10.2484/rcr.v6i4.510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Case Rep ISSN: 1930-0433
Figure 117-year-old male with scapular stress fracture. Radiograph of the shoulder shows lesion in the scapula with aggressive features including lysis of the inferior border of the body of the scapula and adjacent new bone formation (arrow).
Figure 217-year-old male with scapular stress fracture. Comparison of a healing fracture (A and B) and lymphoma of the scapula (C) both in two separate 17-year-old-males. Axial imaging through the scapula in the youth with the healing fracture shows marrow edema and enhancement with periosteal reaction throughout the scapula. (A) T2-weighted, fat-saturated image shows increased signal intensity in the marrow cavity and periosteal reaction (arrow). (B) T1-weighted, fat-saturated imaging shows enhancement of the marrow and periosteum. A second male with lymphoma of the scapula shows similar findings on enhanced T1-weighted, fat-saturated imaging (C).
Figure 317-year-old male with scapular stress fracture. CT with bone-reconstruction algorithm shows a nonaggressive lesion with smooth periosteal reaction along the margins of the fracture (arrows in A). An oblique reformatted image reveals the fracture line as an oblique lucency through the neck of the scapula (arrow in B). A followup shoulder CT four weeks later shows interval healing of the stress fracture (C).