Imaging features of synovial chondromatosis of the spine: a review of 28 cases

Objective To describe the radiographic, CT, and MRI appearance of synovial chondromatosis of the spine. Materials and methods Radiology and pathology databases were searched for cases of spinal synovial chondromatosis from 1984 through 2013, yielding 29 patients (16 males, 13 females). The average a...

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Published inSkeletal radiology Vol. 45; no. 1; pp. 63 - 71
Main Authors Littrell, Laurel A., Inwards, Carrie Y., Sim, Franklin H., Wenger, Doris E.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin/Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 01.01.2016
Springer
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Objective To describe the radiographic, CT, and MRI appearance of synovial chondromatosis of the spine. Materials and methods Radiology and pathology databases were searched for cases of spinal synovial chondromatosis from 1984 through 2013, yielding 29 patients (16 males, 13 females). The average age was 45 years. Twenty-eight patients had imaging studies available for review including seven radiographs, two myelograms, 13 CT, and 23 MRI exams. Results Cases were located in the cervical spine (16), thoracic spine (6), lumbar spine (6), and sacrum (1). Twenty-two cases (79 %) had an epidural component. Eighteen (64 %) had a neural foraminal component. Sixteen (57 %) had a paraspinal component. The mass abutted a facet joint in 96 % of cases. Nearly all (96 %) showed a normal facet joint without internal erosive changes. Most (79 %) showed evidence of chronic extrinsic bony erosion, usually involving the surface of the facet. Only 44 % had calcifications as a dominant finding. Most patients (88 %) had evidence of neural compression. On T1-weighted MRI, 80 % showed intermediate or a combination of intermediate and dark signal. On T2-weighted images, 89 % showed heterogeneous signal with discrete areas of dark signal. The majority (83 %) showed a peripheral pattern of enhancement, usually peripheral nodular. Conclusions Synovial chondromatosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis when evaluating an epidural and/or paraspinal mass near a facet joint, especially when there is evidence of chronic extrinsic bone erosion, dark signal or nodules on T1 and/or T2, and nonenhancing fluid or myxoid signal centrally with thin or nodular peripheral enhancement.
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ISSN:0364-2348
1432-2161
DOI:10.1007/s00256-015-2248-8