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Calcaneal Lipoma with Infarction

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Dr. P here with a 62-year-old man complaining of

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3 00:00:03,639 --> 00:00:08,119 pain when walking and instability, and I don't

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think that's really going to be the focal point

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of this review, even though he does have a

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wavy, detached anterior talofibular ligament,

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and all kinds of other findings including soft

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tissue swelling and ankle effusion and so on.

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The main finding that I want to

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illustrate here is, what in the

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world is going on in this calcaneus?

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It looks like you've got a runway right

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up the center of the calcaneus and

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these very weird areas of high signal

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intensity on the water-weighted image.

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By the way, this is a low-field

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scanner doing just a fine job.

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And then you've got some very dark signal

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intensities on some of the other sequences.

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Now if we look at what sequences we're

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dealing with, we're dealing with a

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proton density non-fat suppression in

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the middle and a T2 on the far right.

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I think it would be appropriate at this juncture

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to call up a T1 sagittal, so let's do that.

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Here comes our T1 sagittal, and perhaps that

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will shed some light on what's going on.

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And when we do, I think all of you

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are struck by the massive fat signal

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intensity that dominates the entire image.

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This entire area is not just

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marrow, it's too homogeneous.

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I mean, look at the fibula.

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You know, it's got a little speckling to it,

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it's got a little architecture to it, and when

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you look at this lesion, it has no architecture

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whatsoever other than these very weird septations.

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And then we also saw that septation

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running down the middle in the axial.

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We have more of them.

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So this is a case where the

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MR really solves a problem.

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Because the main differential diagnosis

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here is a unicameral bone cyst of the heel,

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which can fracture and can require the

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placement of bone chips or bone grafts.

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Whereas this lesion, the calcaneal lipoma, does

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not. We leave these alone, they do cause pain.

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And the reason they cause

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pain is they may infarct.

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And when they infarct, you get these cystic areas

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that may calcify or ossify, much like we see here.

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We saw it in the axial projection.

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Let's go back to it for a minute.

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We'll put two up.

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We'll put our water-weighted sequence up.

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Look at these calcifications back here, which

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are better seen on the proton density image.

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And again, some low signal

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intensity foci on the axial T2.

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And within that calcification, occasionally,

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you'll even get cystic degeneration

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inside, which is kind of strange.

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So you'll have a cystic area, you've got your

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calcaneal lipoma, then within your calcaneal

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lipoma, you may have a cystic area. Then, within

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that cystic area, you may have some calcification.

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And then, within that calcification, you may

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actually have another cystic area inside.

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And this gives rise to what's known

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as the Leisegang ring-like appearance,

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where you have a series of concentric

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rings associated with this lesion.

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Another pattern of calcification is known as

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the birch broom pattern of calcification in

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which it looks like the edges of a birch broom

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in the intramedullary space of the calcaneus.

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There's no sex predilection for this lesion.

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There's no age predilection for this lesion.

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It is a pathognomonic diagnosis.

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You've got fat in the calcaneus.

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You've got calcium.

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You've got cyst formation.

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Dr. P out.

Report

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Neoplastic

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MSK

MRI

Idiopathic

Foot & Ankle

Bone & Soft Tissues

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