Clinical Quiz

Diagnostic imaging studies from three patients with the same condition are shown. What is the most likely diagnosis?

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PROBLEM:

Diagnostic imaging studies from three patients with the same condition are shown. What is the most likely diagnosis?

DISCUSSION:

An aneurysmal bone cyst is an expansile lesion containing thin-walled, blood-filled cystic cavities. In this disorder, large vascular channels are associated with slender-to-plump cells with hemosiderin granules and surrounding giant cells. Aneurysmal bone cysts are generally regarded as non-neoplastic in nature; trauma appears to be important in their pathogenesis. They may exist as a primary abnormality of bone, or as a secondary phenomenon, superimposed on a pre-existing osseous lesion. The nature of the underlying bone disorder is quite variable; examples of aneurysmal bone cysts superimposed on chondroblastomas, giant cell tumors, and osteoblastomas have been recorded.

Aneurysmal bone cysts are usually seen in the first, second, or third decades of life, affecting men and women with equal frequency. They may arise in almost any bone, although most reports indicate their predilection for the spine, innominate bones, and metaphyses of long tubular bones (femur, humerus, tibia, fibula). Small tubular bones in the hands and feet (figure 1), and additional flat or irregular bones such as the scapula, clavicle, ribs, calcaneus (figures 2A and 2B), mandible, maxilla, and calvarium also may be affected.

Radiographically, in the appendicular skeleton, an eccentric osteolytic and expansile lesion which displaces and obscures the cortex may be evident (figure 3). Horizontally-oriented trabeculae may extend into the adjacent soft tissue. Additionally, a shell of bone may surround the lesion, though at early stages the shell can be absent and the aggressive appearance may simulate that of a malignant process. In the spine, the posterior elements are generally affected, and an expansile lucent lesion is seen. Extension into, or primary involvement of a vertebral body can also be found in some cases.

This series of diagnostic challenges is prepared by David J. Sartoris, MD, Profesor, Department of Radiology, University of California School of Medicine, San Diego, CA

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