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Osteoid Osteoma in the Finger

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0:01

Here, we have yet another case of an osteoid

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osteoma, and I hope this convinces you that

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this is an inflammatory process that creates a

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lot of inflammation in the adjacent bone, and

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it typically is located at the very periphery.

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The image on your left is a plain radiograph,

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and the image on your right is a plain radiograph,

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and in the center we have the—this is supposed

0:27

to be a fat-suppressed fluid-sensitive

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sequence, but as you can imagine, as you can

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see, there wasn't a lot of great fat

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suppression that has happened, but not to mind.

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The diagnosis can actually be made

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very, very well on the plain radiograph.

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All we can tell from the frontal radiograph

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is that there is intense, mature periosteal

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reaction around this bone, which is the

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proximal phalanx of the ring finger.

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You may notice that there's a little

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subtle lucency right over here, surrounded

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by an area of increased sclerosis.

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That's difficult to appreciate

1:00

on a frontal projection.

1:01

However, if you go to the lateral

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view, you can see that there is this

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central area of brightness and this

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peripheral area here of lucency, much

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like what we saw in the prior vignette.

1:13

where we looked at osteoid

1:14

osteoma involving the cuboid bone.

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Again, notice how peripheral it's located,

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giving credence to the idea that this

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is a subperiosteal or cortical process.

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And maybe sometimes when we see it very

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mature, the fact that it's present more

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centrally in the bone means that all this

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additional bone has grown around it and

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has remodeled, but it really did start out

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in the periosteum or subperiosteal tissue.

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Look at that intense,

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mature periosteal reaction.

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Oftentimes these are treated with

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NSAIDs, but frequently, for the pain

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to be relieved, they have to be treated

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with radiofrequency ablation or surgery.

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If you want to look at further evidence for

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inflammation, look at the soft tissues at the

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very dorsal or posterior aspect of that digit.

2:01

It's really, really swollen versus the normal

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thickness of the soft tissue more distally.

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Another great example of an osteoid osteoma.

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In a relatively uncommon location,

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especially in the pediatric population.

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But, if it walks like a duck, and quacks

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like a duck, it probably is a duck.

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So this is a duck.

Report

Faculty

Mahesh Thapa, MD, MEd, FAAP

Division Chief of Musculoskeletal Imaging, and Director of Diagnostic Imaging Professor

Seattle Children's & University of Washington

Tags

X-Ray (Plain Films)

Pediatrics

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Idiopathic

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