Interactive Transcript
0:01
Here we have another teenager with knee pain.
0:05
I think you can see already that the
0:08
abnormality is centered around the patella.
0:11
Here is our fat-suppressed, fluid-sensitive
0:13
sequence on the left, T1 sequence on the right,
0:17
and you can notice that the entire patella
0:20
is edematous and it's actually irregular.
0:23
There's an area of central well-defined
0:27
bright signals surrounded by low signal.
0:30
It is actually destruction of the anterior
0:34
cortex, such that fluid is present between
0:37
the soft tissues and the bone itself, or the
0:41
patellar tendon as it drapes across the patella.
0:45
And this is likely in a prepatellar bursa.
0:48
So, a bursitis has developed in this patient.
0:51
Not only that, but the edema has
0:54
also extended into Hoffa's fat pad over here.
0:57
Here's the lateral aspect of Hoffa's fat
0:58
pad, and you notice that it's very edematous.
1:01
So this tells us that this is probably
1:03
going to be very painful because it's
1:05
eliciting an inflammatory reaction.
1:08
On the T1-weighted sequence, we can see
1:10
that, in fact, yes, there is an abnormality
1:12
here extending into the patellar tendon.
1:15
There is indistinctness and blurriness of
1:19
the cortical margin of the anterior patella.
1:22
And yes, there is.
1:23
There is Hoffa's fat pad edema as seen by the
1:27
linear and smudgy low signal in the fat.
1:31
Is there a joint effusion?
1:33
Remarkably, there actually isn't
1:34
a very lot of joint effusion.
1:36
So this patient was treated for a long time
1:39
as psoriatic arthritis because the patient
1:41
had a history of joint problems and such,
1:44
but this lesion actually never got better.
1:46
And finally it was biopsied
1:48
because they thought, well maybe
1:50
this isn't psoriatic arthritis.
1:51
And this came out to be osteoblastoma,
1:55
which is a benign bone tumor.
1:57
You may or may not know, osteoblastomas
2:00
are the smaller cousins, or actually, sorry,
2:03
they're the bigger cousins of osteoid osteomas.
2:06
There are slight differences, however.
2:09
For example, typically, osteoid osteomas
2:13
do better with NSAID treatments, but
2:16
osteoblastomas don't, and frequently
2:20
these lesions have to be excised and
2:23
removed for symptoms to go away.
2:26
And so, there's no pathognomonic finding
2:29
here that says this is osteoblastoma, but if
2:32
you see a lesion in the patella, there are a
2:36
couple of things you should be thinking of.
2:37
Remember the patella is what we call
2:40
an epiphyseal-type bone.
2:43
So, such as the tarsal bones,
2:46
carpal bones, and the patella.
2:49
So what does that mean to
2:50
be an epiphyseal equivalent?
2:52
It means that lesions that occur in
2:54
the epiphysis also have a propensity
2:57
to occur in these epiphyseal
2:59
equivalent bones such as the patella.
3:01
And so when you see something like
3:03
this, osteoblastoma is something you
3:05
should think about and chondroblastoma.
3:09
If you remember from one of the prior
3:10
vignettes, we know that chondroblastoma
3:12
typically occurs in the epiphysis.
3:14
So if I see a lesion here, chondroblastoma
3:17
is another thing to consider.
3:18
Infection is also on the differential.
3:20
You know, when something is this
3:21
aggressive, with cortical destruction,
3:24
always think about infection.
3:25
Eosinophilic granuloma is another
3:27
possibility because it can affect anywhere.
3:30
But the trick is to know that
3:33
there are not a lot of malignant
3:35
processes that arise in the patella.
3:38
Could this be an early manifestation
3:40
of Ewing's or osteosarcoma?
3:42
Sure, it could be.
3:43
But the likelihood is low.
3:45
Uh, ultimately it requires biopsy and this ended
3:48
up being an osteoblastoma, a benign bone lesion.
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