| Literature DB >> 30713381 |
Chidambaram Natrajan Balasubramanian Harisankar1, Ramakrishnan Vijayabhaskar2, Selva Muthukumaran3, Kirushna Kumar4.
Abstract
Occipital condyle syndrome is a rare cause of pain in the head which is characterized by severe and persistent unilateral suboccipital headache with unilateral hypoglossal nerve palsy. We report an elderly female who presented with dysarthria and suboccipital headache. On further evaluation, she was found to have a solitary bone metastases from thyroid cancer. She was treated with local radiation therapy for pain relief, total thyroidectomy, and high-dose radioiodine therapy. The patient is presently free of pain with very good control of the thyroid cancer status.Entities:
Keywords: Occipital condyle syndrome; radioiodine ablation; skull base; thyroid cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 30713381 PMCID: PMC6352645 DOI: 10.4103/ijnm.IJNM_99_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nucl Med ISSN: 0974-0244
Figure 1Whole body fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography-computed tomography images performed for identification of source of malignancy in a patient with right occipital condyle metastases, showing the fluorodeoxyglucose avid left lobe of thyroid nodule, (a) fluorodeoxyglucose avid lytic lesion with associated soft tissue in the right occipital condyle. (b) Maximum intensity image (c) did not reveal any other site of abnormal metabolic activity. Magnetic resonance imaging images (d and e) showing the lesion in the right occipital condyle with involvement of the hypoglossal nerve
Figure 2Whole body iodine scan images (pretherapy anterior [a] and posterior [b] showing iodine avid focal lesions in the neck with iodine avidity in the right occipital condyle metastases. Intense iodine uptake is appreciated in the posttherapy scan (c: Anterior and d: Posterior)
Figure 3Whole body iodine scan images (6 months after initial iodine therapy anterior [a] and posterior [b] showing ablation of the iodine avid focal lesions in the neck. There is near complete response in the lesion in the right occipital condyle. Mild iodine uptake is appreciated in the posttherapy scan after second dose of high-dose radioiodine therapy (c: Anterior and d: Posterior)