Published in:
Open Access
01-12-2009 | Case report
Osseous hemangioma of the seventh cervical vertebra with osteoid formation mimicking metastasis: a case report
Authors:
Stefan Lakemeier, Christina Carolin Westhoff, Susanne Fuchs-Winkelmann, Markus Dietmar Schofer
Published in:
Journal of Medical Case Reports
|
Issue 1/2009
Login to get access
Abstract
Introduction
We report the case of an osseous hemangioma located in the seventh cervical vertebra with reactive osteoid formation and non-typical findings in the radiological and the histopathological examination, mimicking metastasis of a malignant tumor. To our knowledge, this is the first description of such a case in the literature.
Case presentation
A 44-year-old otherwise healthy Caucasian German woman presented with a discrete sensorimotor loss of both upper limbs. Radiologically, an osteolysis in the seventh cervical vertebra suggestive of metastasis of a malignant neoplasm was diagnosed. After performing corporectomy and cage implantation of C7 on the patient, the histopathological examination was complicated by marked osteoid formation obscuring the true diagnosis of an osseous hemangioma with reactive osteoid formation.
Conclusion
Though hemangioma of the bone is a rare tumorous lesion in the cervical spine, it has to be taken into consideration as a reason for neck pain and sensomotoric loss of the upper limbs. Atypical radiological and histopathological presentations may hinder determination of the correct diagnosis. The treatment of such lesions must follow clinical guidelines but may be difficult to define in some cases when the correct diagnosis is not known at the time when therapy starts.