Title: FIBROUS DYSPLASIA: IMAGING CHARACTERISTICS
1FIBROUS DYSPLASIA IMAGING CHARACTERISTICS
H. ZAGHOUANI BEN ALAYA, A.BEN ABDALLAH,S.
YAHYAOUI, S. MAJDOUB,T. RZIGUA, L. BEN
CHRIFA,H. AMARA, D. BEKIR, CH. KRAIEM Imaging
department, Farhat Hached Hospital, Sousse,
Tunisia
2INTRODUCTION
- Fibrous Dysplasia (FD) of bone is a rare
non-inheritable congenital disease. - It is characterized by a focal proliferation of
fibrous tissue in the bone marrow leading to
osteolytic lesions deformities and fractures. - FD can be presented in a monostotic or
polyostotic form. - The complications are represented mainly by bone
deformities and nerve compression
3Introduction
- The imaging appearance is often characteristic
and allows in combination with the clinic
findings the diagnosis - Authors attempted to highlight the interest of
imaging in the diagnosis of FD. - The literature is reviewed to delineate
radiologic features of monostotic and polyostotic
fibrous dysplasia.
4PATIENTS AND METHODS
- Retrospective study of 7 cases.
- FD was monostotic in 4 cases and polystotic in 3
cases - It involves proximal femurs in 1 case, ribs in 2
cases - 4 reported cases were craniofacial form and the
involved bones were maxilla (n 1), sphenoid (n
1), temporal (n 1), and frontal bone (n 2) - Only 2 cases showed involvement of spine.
5CASE N1
- A 19-year-old boy presented to his doctor because
of shoulder pain of 1 years duration.
b
(a) Well-defined lytic lesions of the humerus and
both bones of the forearm, which at times appear
multilocular and expansile with thinnes but
unruptured cortical (b) CT showed in the
medullary cavity replacement of cancellous bone
with a homogeneous hyperdense beach responsible
for thinning of the cortical
a
6Case n 1
MR coronal images The lesions has low signal
intensity on T1-weighted MR image (a ), high
weighted intensity on T2 (b) T1-weighted MR
image with fat saturation and after
administration of gadolinium (c ) show that there
is mild to moderate heterogeneous enhancement of
lesion.
Polyostotic FD
a
b
c
The same patient has cervical MRI for cervical
pain that shows a lesion of the vertebral
hemibody of D1 which has low intensity signal on
T1 without cortical lysis or soft tissue
abnormality on sagittal T1-weighted MR image
(d). T1-weighted MR image with fat saturation
and after administration of gadolinium (e ) show
that there is an intense enhancement of lesion.
e
d
7CASE N2
- A 24-year-old man who presents with a meningeal
syndrome. A cerebro-medullar MRI was indicated
Monostotic FD of spine
c
Sagittal T2-weighted MR image (a ) shows a low
signal lesion of the vertebral body of D1 with
an intense and homogene enhancement of the
lesion on T1-weighted MR image (b ). CT scan
reveals increased bone density of D1 (c ).
a
b
8CASE N3
A 27-years-old woman , consultsfor diplopia
lasting for 6 months. the clinical examination
found left convergent squint and paralysis of the
V and VI cranial nerves.
a
b
c
Coronal MR images show a lesion interesting the
left greater wing of sphenoid. This lesion has
an intermediaire signal on T1 (a) , a low signal
on T2 (b) and present an intense enhancement on
contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MR image with
fat-saturation (c ).
9Case n 3
Base of the skull (sphenoid) FD
Axial and coronal CT scan show fibrous dysplasia
involving body, the left greater wing of
sphenoid bone (blue arrows). Note expanded left
pterygoid process (arrowhead) and inflammatory
changes in left sphenoid sinus ().
10CASE N4
A 35-year old woman who consulted for left
frontal and orbital swelling
Cranio-facial FD
c
a
b
Axial T1-weighted MR (a ) and coronal
T2-weighted MR (b) images reveal expansile
lesion, with low signal intensity involving
rleft frontal and parietal bones Axial
T1-weighted MR image with fat saturation and
after administration of gadolinium (c ) show that
there is mild to moderate heterogeneous
enhancement of lesion.
11CASEN5
A 12-years old boy who presented a ptosis of the
left upper eyelid
Cranio-facial FD
a
b
c
Axial CT scan (a) show thickening and increased
fronto-orbital left bone density. Coronal MR
images show a lesion interesting left roof of
orbit. This lesion has a low signal intensity on
T1 (c) and T2 (b) . T1-weighted MR image after
administration of gadolinium (d ) show that
there is intense and heterogeneous enhancement of
the lesion.
d
12DISCUSSION
- Fibrous dysplasia (FD) is a congenital and
noninherited benign bone disease - FD has been regarded as a developmental skeletal
disorder characterized by replacement of normal
bone with benign cellular fibrous connective
tissue. - It affects both sexes with a slight female
predominance and is diagnosed between 5 and 30
years on average
13Discussion
- It affects both sexes with a slight female
predominance and is diagnosed between 5 and 30
years on average - The lesions grow with the child, stabilize after
puberty and appear exceptionally in adulthood - FD can affect one bone (monostotic form) or
multiple bones (polyostotic form), and the latter
may form part of the McCune-Albright syndrome
(MAS) or Mazabraud syndrome
14Monostotic Fibrous Dysplasia
- The monostotic form of FD comprises approximately
80 of all cases - It is seen in patients between 10 and 70years
old. - The most common sites of involvement include the
rib, femur, tibia, mandible, skull, and humerus - Solitary involvement of other bones is unusual
- FD of the spine is rare. It most commonly
involves the body and adjacent pedicle without
particular predilection for a part of the spinal
column
15Monostotic Fibrous Dysplasia
- The skull and facial bones are the affected sites
in 1025 - All bones of the skull and the face may be
affected - It concerns mainly the ethmoid (72), sphenoid
(43), the frontal bone (33), maxilla (24) and
less frequently the temporal, parietal, occipital
or mandible bone.
16Monostotic Fibrous Dysplasia
- Uncomplicated monostotic lesions are generally
asymptomatic and usually do not cause significant
deformity. - As a rule, monostotic fibrous dysplasia does not
convert to the polyostotic form - lesions do not increase in size over time, and
the disease becomes inactive at puberty
17Polyostotic Fibrous Dysplasia
- The polyostotic form of FD may involve many or
few bones, most commonly the skull and facial
bones, pelvis, spine, and shoulder. - Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia is often
unilateral, and may be bilateral, always
asymmetric - It tends to involve larger segments of bone and
is frequently associated with fractures and
severe deformities.
18Polyostotic Fibrous Dysplasia
- Involvement of the skull may cause cranial nerve
dysfunction with visual and hearing impairment - Although the manifestations of polyostotic
fibrous dysplasia may be severe, it does not
spread or proliferate and generally becomes
quiescent at puberty, but existing deformities
may progress
19Syndromes Associated with Fibrous Dysplasia
- 1-McCune-Albright syndrome is an
endocrinopathy occurring mainly in girls,
consisting of the triad of precocious puberty,
polyostotic FD, and characteristic cutaneous
pigmentation referred to as café au lait spots - 2-Mazabraud syndrome is the rare combination
of fibrous dysplasia and soft-tissue myxomas
20Imaging findings radiograh and CT
- Classically, fibrous dysplasia lesions are
intramedullary, expansile, and well defined
lesion with thick sclerotic borders - Although endosteal scalloping may be present, a
smooth cortical contour is always maintained - Lesions show varying degrees of hazy density with
a ground-glass quality, although some may appear
almost completely radiolucent or sclerotic
21- Three types of lesions are distinguished
depending on the degree of hazy density - The ground-glass pattern
- The homogeneously dense pattern increased
bone density compared with adjacent normal bone - The cystic variety At times, a
mubtilocubar, cystic lesion with well-defined
margins can be seen - Occasionally, calcified cartilaginous and osseous
foci may be present within the lesion
22MRI findings
- The MRI characteristics of FD are variable
- Typically showing signal intensity that is
intermediate to low on T1- weighted images - Intermediate to high signal on T2-weighted images
- These high signal intensities on T2- weighted
images correspond to nonmineralized areas and
regions of cystic change - Fibrous dysplasia reveals varying degrees of
enhancement after gadolinium infusion.
23MRI findings
- The fibrous tissues in FD are well vascularized
and often show numerous small vessels in the
center and large peripheral sinusoids. These
histologic features explain why fibrous dysplasia
enhances intensely after the injection of
contrast material
24Complications of Fibrous Dysplasia
- 1-Pathologic fracture
- These fractures generally heal normally, but
additional fractures may subsequently occur at
the same site - 2-Malignant degeneration of FD
- Complicates less than 1 of all cases
- Radiographic findings include cortical
destruction and associated soft-tissue masses - The most common malignancies include
osteosarcoma, fibrosarcoma, and malignant fibrous
histiocytoma.
25CONCLUSION
- Fibrous dysplasia is a common benign bone disease
existing in monostotic and polyostotic forms - Complications, and associations of fibrous
dysplasia is important to ensure the accurate
diagnosis and appropriate management of this
disease - The imaging features of fibrous dysplasia are
characteristic, although not specific, and depend
on the underlying histopathology of a given
lesion.