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Published in: Skeletal Radiology 10/2012

01-10-2012 | Scientific Article

Enchondromas in children: imaging appearance with pathological correlation

Authors: Guillaume Bierry, Darcy A. Kerr, G. Petur Nielsen, Andrew E. Rosenberg, Ambrose J. Huang, Martin Torriani, Miriam A. Bredella

Published in: Skeletal Radiology | Issue 10/2012

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Abstract

Objective

Enchondromas are benign lesions that may present with nonspecific features on imaging in children. Correlation of histology with imaging findings is often required to make the final diagnosis of a benign lesion. The aim of this study was to review imaging and pathological findings of enchondromas in children.

Materials and methods

Imaging examinations of 12 enchondromas in 11 patients (median age 14 years) were retrospectively reviewed. Imaging evaluation included an assessment of lesion size, relationship to the growth plate, mineralization, matrix and periosteal reaction, intrinsic MR signal characteristics, and intraosseous and soft-tissue edema. Pathological findings were reviewed.

Results

Lesions were located in the phalanx in 33% (4 out of 12), metacarpal in 25% (3 out of 12), femur in 33% (4 out of 12) and tibia in 8% cases (1 out of 12). The mean size was 28 mm (range, 11–70 mm). Matrix mineralization in a typical “rings-and-arcs” pattern was observed in 20% of the lesions with available radiographs/CT (2 out of 10). Lesions were expansive with endosteal scalloping in 75% of cases (9 out 12) and contacted the growth plate in 50% of cases (6 out of 12). All enchondromas in which MR imaging was available (5 out of 5) demonstrated typical cartilaginous matrix of lobules of high T2 signal, low T1 signal, and peripheral enhancement.

Conclusion

Enchondromas in children are relatively large lesions, with frequent endosteal scalloping and rare matrix mineralization.
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Metadata
Title
Enchondromas in children: imaging appearance with pathological correlation
Authors
Guillaume Bierry
Darcy A. Kerr
G. Petur Nielsen
Andrew E. Rosenberg
Ambrose J. Huang
Martin Torriani
Miriam A. Bredella
Publication date
01-10-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Skeletal Radiology / Issue 10/2012
Print ISSN: 0364-2348
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2161
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00256-012-1377-6

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