Interactive Transcript
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Here we have a child who presented
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with left hip pain, uh, and fever.
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So I have three images here
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for you, or three sequences.
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The image on the left is a
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coronal T1 fat sat post-contrast.
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That image in the middle is actually the same.
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Let me bring up this one, which is an STIR.
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Let me zoom up a little.
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So this STIR is a fat-suppressed fluid
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sensitive sequence, which demonstrates
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again in the area of abnormal
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enhancement, there is a lot of edema.
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So this extends to the acetabular tectum.
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Not really a lot of joint effusion
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associated, and it sort of stops in
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the region of the triradiate cartilage.
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Here are the axial post-contrast images.
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Going through the similar area shows
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that, indeed, there is quite a bit of
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enhancement, and even a little bit of
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periosteal reaction here at the periphery.
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You have the normal side on the right for
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comparison, showing that, really, there
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should be nothing here at the periphery.
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Inflammation happening here.
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So, the first thought when you
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see this, especially with that
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history, should be infection.
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Indeed, this is what this ended up
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being; this ended up being osteomyelitis.
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And the reason I'm showing this case is
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because it proves, or it suggests, one of
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the key teaching points in the pediatric
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population is that stuff around cartilaginous
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margins, such as the triradiate cartilage,
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should be treated as a metaphyseal equivalent.
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So this area really is a metaphyseal equivalent.
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And why is that important?
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It's because the metaphysis is
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a very richly vascular area.
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There's an area where the flow is very, very
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slow, and if there is an infection that's
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hematogenously being spread, the metaphysis
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is a great location for it, and because
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this portion of the pelvic bone is a
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metaphyseal equivalent, this is also a
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great place for infection to embed itself.
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So, I want to leave you with one other thought.
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Anytime I see inflammation in the pelvic
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area, around the sacroiliac joints, around
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the pelvis, I also think of another diagnosis,
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which is coming up more and more now, and
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that's called chronic recurrent multifocal
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osteomyelitis, or CRMO.
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The name says osteomyelitis, but it
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really isn't a bacterial infection per se.
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It's more of a chronic,
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uh, inflammatory process.
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Some people think it's
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autoimmune, not really sure.
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But when I see a lesion like this, I say,
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probably osteomyelitis, but in the back of
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your mind, consider, could this be CRMO?
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If you think it's CRMO,
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look for other lesions.
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Oftentimes, these CRMO lesions will
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have lesions in the contralateral side,
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uh, around the sacroiliac joints, around
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the hips, and in the vertebral bodies.
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But just because you don't see
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it doesn't mean it's not true.
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If CRMO is suspected,
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oftentimes you'll need to get a whole
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body MRI to look for other lesions.
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And the treatment is completely
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different for those two entities.
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Oftentimes, CRMO needs a biopsy to
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diagnose. Infection may
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need a biopsy also if it's not being, if
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it's not being treated well or it's not
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responding properly to antibiotic therapy.
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But this ended up being osteomyelitis,
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but it easily could have been a
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condition called CRMO.
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