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Information

 Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders

  1. CHILDHOOD
    Most common malignancy of childhood:
    • of all pediatric malignancies

    Histo:
    1. Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL in 75%)
      most often in children <5 years of age
      • lymph node enlargement rare
    2. Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML)
      tends to affect older children + adolescents
      • lymph node enlargement common
    • migratory paraarticular arthralgias (25–50%) adjacent metaphyseal lesions (may be confused with acute rheumatic fever / rheumatoid arthritis)
    • low-grade fever, bruising, fatigue
    • bone pain increased intraosseous pressure from proliferation of malignant cells
    • elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, anemia
    • hepatosplenomegaly, occasionally lymphadenopathy

    Peripheral blood smears may be negative in aleukemic form!
    Skeletal manifestations in 50–90%:
    • Location: proximal + distal metaphyses of long bones, flat bones, spine
    1. Diffuse osteopenia (most common pattern)
      • diffuse demineralization of spine + long bones leukemic infiltration of bone marrow + catabolic protein / mineral metabolism
      • coarse trabeculation of spongiosa destruction of finer trabeculae
      • multiple biconcave / partially collapsed vertebrae (14%)
    2. “Leukemic lines” (40–53% in ALL):
      • transverse radiolucent metaphyseal bands, uniform + regular across the width of metaphysis (= leukemic infiltration of bone marrow / osteoporosis at sites of rapid growth)

      Location: large joints (proximal tibia, distal femur, proximal humerus, distal radius + ulna)
      • horizontal / curvilinear bands in vertebral bodies + edges of iliac crest
      • dense metaphyseal lines after treatment
    3. Focal destruction of flat / tubular bones:
      • multiple small clearly defined ovoid / spheroid osteolytic lesions (destruction of spongiosa, later cortex) in 30–60%
      • moth-eaten appearance, sutural widening, prominent convolutional markings of skull

      Lytic lesions distal to knee / elbow in children are suggestive of leukemia (rather than metastases)!
    4. Isolated periostitis of long bones (infrequent):
      • smooth / lamellated / sunburst pattern of periosteal reaction (= cortical penetration by sheets of leukemic cells into subperiosteum) in 12–25%
    5. Metaphyseal osteosclerosis + focal osteoblastic lesion (very rare)
      • osteosclerotic lesions reactive osteoblastic proliferation (late in disease)
      • mixed (lytic + bone-forming) lesions in 18%

      Dx: sternal marrow / peripheral blood smear
      Cx: proliferation of leukemic cells in marrow leads to extraskeletal hematopoiesis
      DDx: metastatic neuroblastoma, Langerhans cell histiocytosis
  2. ADULTHOOD
    • Death usually occurs before skeletal abnormalities manifest
    • osteoporosis
    • solitary radiolucent foci (vertebral collapse)
    • permeating radiolucent mottling (proximal humerus)

    MR:
    • diffuse decrease in SI compared with normal marrow on T1WI
    • isointense / mildly hyperintense compared with normal marrow on T2WI high water content of leukemic cells + displacement of fat
    • abnormally hyperintense relative to normal marrow on STIR