Symptoms |
- Presentation
- most are asymptomatic
- often present as pathologic fx of the hand but asymptomatic in foot
- Physical exam
- enchondroma may disrupt the growth plate and lead to shortening and angular deformities
|
Imaging |
- Radiograph
- "pop-corn" mineralization (calcification), stippled ringsin diaphyseal or metaphyseal medullary cavity
- occasionally may have purly lytic appearance (especially in hand)
- Bone scan may be helpful and is usually minimally warm
- MRI may show steak of cartilage or "sled runner tracks"
|
Histology |
- Classic characteristics include
- hypocellular with bland hyaline cartilage (blue balls of cartilage)
- lesions in hand are more hypercellular and even display some worrisome histologic characteristics
- small chondroid cells in lacunar spaces
|
Differential |
- Must differentiate from a bone infarct ("smoke-up-chimney" appearance)
|
Treatment |
- Nonoperative
- observation
- treatment for most enchondromas
- watch with serial xrays for interval growth (obtain xrays at 3 months and 1 year from time of presentation)
- Operative
- curettage and bone grafting
- indications
- lesion that shows any change on serial xrays
- hand fractures after fracture has first been allowed to heal with imobilization
- Ollier's disease and Maffucci's
- treat deformity with diaphysectomy
- watch lesions carefully for malignant transformation
|
No comments:
Post a Comment