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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 32-year-old woman sustained a minor sliding accident with moderate to severe pain about the left distal thigh and hip and the right shoulder. Radiographs showed marked osteopenia, multiple osteolytic bone lesions, and a pathologic fracture of the left distal femur. Surgical intervention was conducted for the pathologic fracture, and the pathological findings confirmed the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism with
osteitis
fibrosa cystica. We report this rare case here because it may be mistaken for neoplastic
metastatic disease
on radiographs and bone scan. The pathologic fracture usually heals and the bone mineral density improves significantly within 6 months after parathyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Pathologic fracture of the distal femur in osteitis fibrosa cystica simulating metastatic disease. 1516 33
Bone pain due to bone metastases is a frequent presenting symptom of lung cancer. However, sternal
metastases
are unusual. We report two patients with inflammatory sternal
metastases
mimicking
osteitis
and indicating lung cancer. Chest computed tomography scan showed lytic lesion of the sternal manubrium invading anterior soft tissue. Diagnosis relied on histological examination of sternal biopsy and negative bacteriologic cultures. Local radiotherapy resulted in resolution of local signs.
...
PMID:Inflammatory sternal metastasis heralding lung cancer: two cases. 1622 Feb 26
Metastatic disease
, myeloma, and lymphoma are the most common malignant spinal tumors. Hemangioma is the most common benign tumor of the spine. Other primary osseous lesions of the spine are more unusual but may exhibit characteristic imaging features that can help the radiologist develop a differential diagnosis. Radiologic evaluation of a patient who presents with osseous vertebral lesions often includes radiography, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Because of the complex anatomy of the vertebrae, CT is more useful than conventional radiography for evaluating lesion location and analyzing bone destruction and condensation. The diagnosis of spinal tumors is based on patient age, topographic features of the tumor, and lesion pattern as seen at CT and MR imaging. A systematic approach is useful for recognizing tumors of the spine with characteristic features such as bone island, osteoid osteoma, osteochondroma, chondrosarcoma, vertebral angioma, and aneurysmal bone cyst. In the remaining cases, the differential diagnosis may include other primary spinal tumors, vertebral
metastases
and major nontumoral lesions simulating a vertebral tumor, Paget disease, spondylitis, echinococcal infection, and aseptic
osteitis
. In many cases, vertebral biopsy is warranted to guide treatment.
...
PMID:Diagnostic imaging of solitary tumors of the spine: what to do and say. 1863 27
Pamidronate, along with other bisphosphonates, has been used for treatment of bone pain secondary to malignant involvement or
metastatic disease
for years. Some data, however, have also accumulated on the utility of pamidronate in a variety of benign conditions frequently handled by rheumatologists. This study aims to review the available published data regarding the potential use of pamidronate in rheumatology practice. Methods include the review of relevant articles retrieved by a PUBMED search utilizing the index term "pamidronate". All available randomized control trials, open trials, and case series, as well as properly reported case studies evaluating usage of pamidronate in rheumatic disorders, have been included in the literature review. The efficacy of pamidronate in patients with spondyloarthropathies; synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis, and
osteitis
syndrome; hypertrophic osteoarthropathy; osteoporotic vertebral fractures; chronic back pain due to disk disease or spinal stenosis; Charcot arthropathy; transient osteoporosis; and complex regional pain syndrome-I, has been demonstrated in more than 40 reports, the majority of which, however, were not controlled studies. In some of reviewed conditions, aside from providing analgesic relief, pamidronate may also have disease-modifying properties. While used in different doses in a variety of rheumatic disorders, pamidronate was generally reported to be well tolerated with an overall good safety profile. Pamidronate may represent an effective and safe choice for a spectrum of rheumatic patients, suffering from intractable musculoskeletal pain, unresponsive to traditionally recommended therapies. Large randomized, controlled studies examining the efficacy of pamidronate in the rheumatic conditions are urgently needed.
...
PMID:Pamidronate treatment in rheumatology practice: a comprehensive review. 1969 Sep 38
Osteitis
Condensans Ilii (OCI) is a benign cause of axial low back pain. Although no clear etiology has been identified, the prevailing theory is that mechanical strain affects the auricular portion of the ilium and causes premature arthritis. The location of the sclerosis has been traditionally confined to the ilium and may give the false impression of sacro-iliac joint involvement. Clinicians must be guided by history, radiographic findings, and laboratory studies in differentiating OCI with other disorders; furthermore additional causes of low back pain including
metastatic disease
and ankylosing spondylitis must be ruled out. Treatments for the condition are primarily conservative (therapies, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications, and steroid injections), with surgical resection being reserved for refractory cases.
...
PMID:Osteitis Condensans Ilii. 1971 Oct 79
SAPHO (synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis and
osteitis
) syndrome represents an inflammatory spectrum ranging from an
osteitis
through to a spondyloarthropathy which may or may not be associated with dermatological manifestations. We present the case of a 52-year-old female who presented with non-specific back pain. Radiological imaging showed mixed lytic and sclerotic lesions of her lumbar spine and pelvis consistent with bony
metastatic disease
. She underwent CT-guided biopsy that confirmed histological findings in keeping with non-bacterial
osteitis
/chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis. This case report and review of the literature highlights the importance of the SAPHO syndrome and its treatment.
...
PMID:SAPHO syndrome presenting as widespread bony metastatic disease of unknown origin. 2124 99
A 58-year-old female patient presented with several weeks history of significant bilateral knee pain. Initial knee radiographs demonstrated lucencies of the bony cortex while extensive osteolytic lesions on a routine chest radiograph were suggestive of multiple myeloma or bony
metastases
. Biochemical investigation revealed primary hyperparathyroidism with renal insufficiency. A parathyroid adenoma was demonstrated on a neck ultrasound and sestamibi scan and subsequently confirmed by histology. We illustrate a case of primary hyperparathyroidism with
osteitis
fibrosa cystica and brown tumours which were initially mistaken for malignant disease.
...
PMID:Osteolytic lesions: osteitis fibrosa cystica in the setting of severe primary hyperparathyroidism. 2855 85
Although bone disease and stone disease are the universally accepted classical manifestations of primary hyperparathyroidism, clinical parathyroid bone disease is rarely seen today in the United States (<5% of patients) and Western Europe. Nevertheless, in a given patient, classical skeletal involvement can be the first sign of primary hyperparathyroidism, but not recognized because it is not usually included, anymore, in the differential diagnosis of this manifestation of skeletal disease. We describe four cases of primary hyperparathyroidism in which the first clinical manifestation of the disease was a pathological fracture that masqueraded as a malignancy. The presence of large osteolytic lesions gave rise to the initial diagnosis of a primary or
metastatic cancer
. In none of the reported cases was primary hyperparathyroidism with
osteitis
fibrosa considered as the diagnosis. It would seem to us that this course is best explained by the fact that in many countries such manifestations of primary hyperparathyroidism have become a rarity. In fact, the incidence of
osteitis
fibrosa among patients with primary hyperparathyroidism in the US is estimated as so rare, that in majority of medical centers routine x-ray examinations of the bones in these patients is not recommended. The X-ray or computed tomography scan findings of
osteitis
fibrosa cystica include lytic or multilobular cystic changes. Multiple bony lesions representing brown tumors may be misdiagnosed on computed tomography scan as metastatic carcinoma, bone cysts, osteosarcoma, and especially giant-cell tumor. Distinguishing between primary hyperparathyroidism and malignancy is made readily by the concomitant measurement of parathyroid hormone which in primary hyperparathyroidism, again, will be markedly elevated. In the hypercalcemias of malignancy, such elevations of parathyroid hormone are virtually never seen.
...
PMID:Osteitis fibrosa cystica-a forgotten radiological feature of primary hyperparathyroidism. 2890 Aug 35
We report a case of severe hyperparathyroidism complicated by
osteitis
fibrosa cystica in an 83-year-old man post-myocardial infarction. The lesions were evident on magnetic resonance imaging only. A diagnosis of parathyroid carcinoma was considered due to clinical appearance of the parathyroid intraoperatively and the presence of an invasive T3 lesion mimicking
metastatic disease
. Differentiating parathyroid carcinoma from the benign causes at presentation can be difficult due to overlapping clinical, biochemical, radiological and histological features. The presence of bony lesions increases the diagnostic complexity of the case and demonstrates the challenges involved in the management of this disorder.
...
PMID:Refractory hyperparathyroidism with a T3 bony lesion-differential diagnoses. 2959 77
SAPHO syndrome is a rare clinical entity composed of synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis, and
osteitis
(SAPHO). We describe a case of SAPHO syndrome masquerading as metastatic breast cancer in a patient with localized breast cancer who presented with cord compression. There was no pathologic evidence of
metastatic cancer
; however, a bone scan indicated osseous involvement. After multidisciplinary review of images and with additional findings of pustulosis and acne, a clinical diagnosis of SAPHO was made.
...
PMID:SAPHO Syndrome Masquerading as Metastatic Breast Cancer. 2975 4
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