| Literature DB >> 35036015 |
Andy Y Wang1, Joseph N Tingen1, Eric J Mahoney2, Ron I Riesenburger1.
Abstract
Tumoral calcinosis involves focal calcium deposits in the soft tissues surrounding a joint and most commonly occurs in the hips and elbows, rarely in the cervical spine. Furthermore, it has not been known to be associated with pathologic fractures. To the best of our knowledge, our case report highlights the first case of a pathologic type II odontoid fracture associated with adjacent tumoral calcinosis, resulting in pain, dysphagia, and severe spinal stenosis. The patient underwent a posterior occipitocervical fusion and C1 laminectomy, along with planned tracheostomy and gastrostomy to avoid expected difficulty with postoperative extubation and dysphagia. Additionally, we present a review of existing literature on tumoral calcinosis in the upper cervical spine.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35036015 PMCID: PMC8759912 DOI: 10.1155/2022/2798490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Neurol Med ISSN: 2090-6676
Figure 1Noncontrast CT scans and T2-weighted MRI of preoperative odontoid fracture with associated tumoral calcinosis. (a) Sagittal, coronal, and axial CT images, respectively from left to right, show pathological type II odontoid fracture, (b) left: left parasagittal CT image shows extensive tumoral calcinosis; right: right parasagittal CT image shows extensive tumoral calcinosis, and (c) left: T2-weighted sagittal MRI shows spinal cord compression at C1-C2; right: T2-weighted axial MRI at C1-C2.
Figure 2(a) Intraoperative photo of the posterior occipitocervical (occiput to C3) fusion with a posterior C1 laminectomy. (b) Postoperative AP and lateral x-rays of the cervical spine showing the construct.
Differential diagnoses considered.
| Differential diagnosis | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Infection | No local (redness, swelling, and other skin findings) nor systemic signs (fever) and no disc space involvement |
| Type I odontoid fracture secondary to trauma | Type I involves avulsion of the rostral tip of the odontoid process; in this case, the fracture is at the base |
| Type III odontoid fracture secondary to trauma | Type III involves fracture through the body of C2; in this case, the fracture is at the base |
| Type II odontoid fracture secondary to trauma alone | Type II involves fracture through the base of the odontoid process, which matches this case, but there is no identifiable fall or injury mechanism |
| Pathologic type II odontoid fracture secondary to primary bone tumor or bone metastases | No evidence of primary bone tumor or metastases on imaging, no clinical symptoms such as weight loss, and no personal or family history |
| Pathologic type II odontoid fracture secondary to tumoral calcinosis | This differential matches the type of odontoid fracture and explains why there is a fracture despite no obvious injury mechanism. The patient has a history of tumoral calcinosis and along with the radiological findings, differentiates tumoral calcinosis from other calcifying conditions |
Existing case reports of tumoral calcinosis involving the upper cervical spine at C1 or C2.
| Authors, year | Sex | Age | Location | Associated conditions | Clinical presentation | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kokubun et al., 1996 | F | 68 | C1-C2 | NP | Neck pain below the occiput | Resection, laminectomy |
| Arginteanu et al., 1997 [ | F | 65 | C1–C5 | SS | Neck pain | Decompression, resection, fusion |
| Mooney et al., 1997 | M | 17 mo. | C1-C2 | NP | Torticollis | Resection, limited laminectomy |
| Ward et al., 1997 | F | 62 | C1-C2 | SS | Left-side neck pain, limited range of motion, tenderness | CT-guided aspiration |
| Durant et al., 2001 [ | M | 78 | C1-C2 | OA, HTN | Pannus from RA | Posterior fusion, excision |
| Matsukado et al., 2001 [ | F | 54 | C2–C4 | RF, RM | Cervical pain, weakness | C-2 laminectomy, C3-4 laminoplasty |
| Van de Perre et al., 2003 | F | 74 | C2–C7 | SS | Increasing joint/neck pain | NS |
| Olsen et al., 2004 | F | 75 | C2–C4 | SS | Torticollis, swelling | CT-guided biopsy and excision |
| Smucker et al., 2006 [ | M | 60 | C1-C2 | SS | Severe upper neck pain, myelopathy | Decompression, resection, fusion |
| Smucker et al., 2006 [ | F | 59 | C2–C5 | SS | Neck pain | Laminectomy, resection, fusion |
| Tuy et al., 2008 | F | 50 | C2-C3 | RF, previous scleroderma | Neck pain | Resection |
| Shoji et al., 2012 | F | 34 | C1-C2 | SS | Severe headache, narrowed face | NS |
| Bisson-Vaivre et al., 2013 | F | 72 | C1-C2 | SS | Severe upper neck pain | Colchicine treatment |
| Chang et al., 2013 | F | 44 | C1-C2 | RF, HTN | Severe neck soreness, headache | C1 laminectomy, fixation, fusion |
| Daumas et al., 2013 | F | 60 | C2–C5 | SS | NS | NS |
| Lebl et al., 2013 | F | 63 | C1-C2 | SS | Severe neck pain, limited range of motion | Physical therapy, steroid injections |
| Al-Khudairi et al., 2015 [ | F | 62 | C2–C6 | SS | Weakness, altered sensation, inability to mobilize | Decompression, fusion |
| Ashraf et al., 2015 | M | 5 mo. | C2-C3 | Familial RA | Torticollis | CT-guided biopsy, excision |
| Fatehi et al., 2016 | F | 73 | C2-C3 | HTN, RF | Growing painful mass | Only hemodialysis |
| Mooney et al., 2017 [ | F | 60 | C1-C2 | HTN | Dysphagia, neck pain | Transoral decompression |
| Ebot et al., 2019 | F | 71 | C1-C2 | NS | Neck pain | C1-C2 laminectomy |
| Steward et al., 2019 | F | 4 mo. | C1-C2 | NS | Loss of head control, neck hypotonia | Surgical excision |
| Current case report | F | 73 | C1-C2 | HTN, Parkinson's, HP | Achy neck pain, dysphagia, pathological fracture | Occ-cervical fusion, C1 laminectomy, tracheostomy |
M: male, F: female, HP: hyperparathyroidism, OA: osteoarthritis, NP: no particular cause, NS: not specified, HTN: hypertension, RA; rheumatoid arthritis, RF: renal failure, RM: radiculomyelopathy, SS: systemic sclerosis/scleroderma, RI: renal insufficiency.