Magnetic resonance imaging aspects of giant-cell tumours of bone
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Journal of Medical Imaging and Radiation Oncology
Abstract
This study aimed to describe the magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) features of giant-cell tumours of bone.
Methods: We analysed the clinical and MRI features of patients diagnosed with
giant-cell tumours of bone confirmed by histopathology at our institution
between 2010 and 2012.
Results: The peak incidence was between the second and third decades of life.
There was no gender predominance. The most frequent locations were the
knee and wrist. Pain and swelling were the prevailing symptoms. Fifty-one per
cent of the patients were found to have associated secondary aneurysmal
bone cysts on histopathology. On MRI, lesions demonstrated signal intensity
equal to that of skeletal muscle on T1-weighted images and low signal
intensity on T2-weighted images in 90% of cases. In gadolinium-enhanced
T1-weighted images, 76.6% of cases demonstrated heterogeneous enhance ment. We observed cystic components involving more than 50% of the lesion
in 17 cases (56.6%). There was extra-osseous involvement in 13 cases
(43.3%).
Conclusion: MRI offers a valuable diagnostic tool for giant-cell tumours of bone.
Contrast-enhanced MRI can distinguish between cystic and solid components of
the tumour. MRI is also the imaging modality of choice for evaluation of
soft-tissue involvement, offering a complete preoperative diagnosis.
Description
p. 674–678.: il. p&b.
Citation
PEREIRA, Helcio Mendonça; MARCHIORI, Edson dos Santos; SEVERO, Alessandro. Magnetic resonance imaging aspects of giant-cell tumours of boné. Journal of Medical Imaging and Radiation Oncology, v. 58, p. 674–678, 2014.