Differential Diagnosis of Musculoskeletal Disorders
Categories of Soft-tissue Masses
- Neoplastic
Incidence: 300÷100,000 / year; benign÷malignant = 100÷1
- benign (most frequent)
- Lipoma
- Hemangioma
- Desmoid tumor
- Ganglion cyst
- Pigmented villonodular synovitis
- Neurofibroma (5%)
- Lipoblastoma
- malignant
Frequency: 1% of all cancers in adults, increasing with age
- Malignant fibrous histiocytoma
- Liposarcoma
- Inflammatory
- Traumatic
- Vascular
Superficial Soft-tissue Mass
- MESENCHYMAL TUMOR
- cutaneous
- Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans
- subcutaneous
- Lipoma / liposarcoma
- Angioma (hemangioma, lymphangioma, mixed)
- Peripheral nerve sheath tumor
- Malignant fibrous histiocytoma
- Leiomyosarcoma
- Epithelioid sarcoma
- fascial
- Nodular fasciitis
- Fibromatosis
- SKIN APPENDAGE LESION
- Epidermal inclusion cyst
- Pilomatricoma
- Eccrine cystadenoma / hydrocystoma
= cystic ectasia of dermal portion of eccrine duct - Cylindroma (head, neck, scalp in women)
- Syringoma (eyelids, upper cheek)
- METASTATIC TUMOR
◊ 510% of all cancer patients develop skin metastases
- Carcinoma
mnemonic: BLOCK
- Breast
- Lung
- Ovary
- Colon
- Kidney
- Melanoma (in 30% of melanoma patients)
- Myeloma (in <5% of multiple myeloma patients)
- OTHER TUMORS & TUMORLIKE LESION
- Myxoma
- homogeneous fluidlike signal intensity
- Lymphoma
- Granuloma annulare
- INFLAMMATORY LESION
- Cellulitis
- = inflammation / infection of cutis + subcutis without gross suppuration
- thickened skin with reticulated fluidlike SI
- Fasciitis
- = inflammation / infection of fascia
- fascial thickening + enhancement
- Adenitis
- intermediate SI on nonfat-suppressed T2WI
- Abscess
- = confined focal collection of pus or necrotic tissue + WBCs + bacteria
- fluidlike signal intensity + rim of enhancement
- Phlegmon
- = poorly defined region with edema-like pattern and indistinct margins
Histologic Classification of Soft-tissue Lesions
- FATTY
- Lipoma
- Angiolipoma
- Liposarcoma
- FIBROUS
- Fibroma
- Nodular fasciitis
- Aggressive fibromatosis / desmoid
- Fibrosarcoma
- MUSCLE
- skeletal muscle tumor
- Rhabdomyoma
- Rhabdomyosarcoma
- smooth muscle tumor
- Leiomyoma
- Leiomyosarcoma
- VASCULAR
- Hemangioma
- Kaposiform hemangioendothelioma
- Kaposi sarcoma
- Hemangiopericytoma
- Hemangiosarcoma
- Glomus tumor
- Myopericytoma
- LYMPH
- Lymphangioma
- Lymphangiosarcoma
- Lymphadenopathy in lymphoma / metastasis
- SYNOVIAL
- Nodular synovitis
- Pigmented villonodular synovitis
- Synovial sarcoma
- NEURAL
- Neurofibroma
- Neurilemmoma
- Ganglioneuroma
- Malignant neuroblastoma
- Neurofibrosarcoma
- CARTILAGE AND BONE
- Myositis ossificans
- Extraskeletal osteoma
- Extraskeletal / soft-tissue chondroma
- Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma
- Extraskeletal osteosarcoma
- UNCERTAIN DIFFERENTIATION
- Intramuscular myxoma
- Ossifying fibromyxoid tumor
- Synovial sarcoma
- Primitive neuroectodermal tumor
- Extraskeletal Ewing sarcoma
Most Frequent Benign Soft-tissue Tumors
8 pathologic diagnoses make up 70% of all benign tumors!
- Lipoma 16%
- Fibrous histiocytoma 13%
- Nodular fasciitis 11%
- Neurogenic neoplasm 10%
- Hemangioma 7%
- Fibromatosis 7%
- PVNS / giant cell tumor of tendon sheath 4%
- Ganglion cyst
Most Frequent Malignant Soft-tissue Tumors
7 pathologic diagnoses make up 80% of all malignant tumors!
- Undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (= malignant fibrous histiocytoma) 29%
- Liposarcoma 14%
- Nonspecific spindle cell sarcoma 12%
- Leiomyosarcoma 8%
- Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor 6%
- Dermatofibroma protuberans 6%
- Synovial sarcoma 5%
Fat-containing Soft-tissue Masses
- BENIGN LIPOMATOUS TUMORS
- Lipoma
- Intra- / intermuscular lipoma
- Synovial lipoma
- Lipoma arborescens = diffuse synovial lipoma
- Neural fibrolipoma = fibrolipomatous tumor of nerve
- Macrodystrophia lipomatosa
- LIPOMA VARIANTS
- Lipoblastoma
- Lipomatosis
- Madelung disease
- Mediastinal lipomatosis
- Pancreatic lipomatosis
- Pelvic lipomatosis
- Hibernoma
- MALIGNANT LIPOMATOUS TUMOR
- Liposarcoma
- OTHER FAT-CONTAINING TUMORS
- Hemangioma
- Elastofibroma dorsi
- LESIONS MIMICKING FAT-CONTAINING TUMORS
- Myxoid tumors: intramuscular myxoma, extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma, myxoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma
- Neural tumors: neurofibroma, neurilemmoma, malignant schwannoma
√ 73% have tissue attenuation less than muscle - Hemorrhage
Benign Fibrous Soft-Tissue Tumors
So-called Fibrohistiocytic Tumors
- Benign fibrous histiocytoma
- Diffuse-type giant cell tumor
- Malignant fibrous histiocytoma
Benign Myofibroblastic Proliferations
- Nodular fasciitis
- Proliferative fasciitis / myositis
- Fibroma of tendon sheath
- Keloid and hypertrophic scar
- Elastofibroma
Musculoskeletal Fibromatoses
= wide range of clinicopathologic conditions with benign proliferation of fibrous tissue characterized by infiltrative growth pattern and tendency to recur locally
Superficial Fascial Fibromatoses
- Palmar fibromatosis (Dupuytren disease)
- Plantar fibromatosis (Ledderhose disease)
- Penile fibromatosis (Peyronie disease)
- Knuckle pads
= focal fibrous thickening dorsally at PIP / MCP joint - Juvenile aponeurotic fibroma
- Infantile digital fibromatosis
Deep Musculoaponeurotic Fibromatoses
- Desmoid-type fibromatosis
- Abdominal wall fibromatosis
- Mesenteric fibromatosis
- Retroperitoneal fibromatosis
- Pelvic fibromatosis
- Gardner syndrome fibromatosis
Childhood Fibromatosis
- Fibromatosis colli
- Lipofibromatosis
- Calcifying aponeurotic fibroma
- Inclusion body fibromatosis
- Infantile myofibromatosis
- Juvenile aponeurotic fibroma
- Infantile digital fibromatosis
Cystlike T2-hyperintense Soft-tissue Lesions on MRI
Cause:
- true cyst
- internal tumor necrosis
- high extracellular water content = edema
- extracellular matrix of high water + protein content = myxoid stroma
- TRULY CYSTIC LESION
- Synovial cyst
- Ganglion cyst
- Distended bursa
- Postsurgical collection + hematoma
- Skin appendage: eg, epidermal inclusion cyst
- Lymphatic malformation
- Hydatid cyst
- BENIGN SOLID LESION
- Myxoma
- Peripheral nerve sheath tumor
- Vascular lesions: hemangioma, vascular malformation
- Glomus tumor
- MALIGNANT SOLID LESION
- Malignant fibrous histiocytoma = undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma
- Myxoid sarcoma:
- myxofibrosarcoma
- myxoid liposarcoma
- extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma
- Synovial sarcoma
- Metastasis
Myxomatous Lesions of Soft Tissue
= tumor with abundance of extracellular mucoid material
√mimicker of cysts ← high water content
- BENIGN
- Intramuscular myxoma
- perilesional edema + rim of fat
- Synovial cyst
- communication with joint / tendon sheath
- Bursa
- Soft-tissue ganglion
- communication with joint / tendon sheath
- Benign peripheral nerve sheath tumor: neurofibroma, schwannoma
- entering-and-exiting-nerve sign
- MALIGNANT
- Myxoid liposarcoma
- Myxoid leiomyosarcoma
- Myxoid chondrosarcoma
- internal chondroid matrix
- Ossifying fibromyxoid tumor
- incomplete peripheral ossification
- Myxofibrosarcoma
- SYNDROMES
- Mazabraud syndrome
Extraskeletal Osseous + Cartilaginous Tumors
- OSSEOUS SOFT-TISSUE TUMORS
√ cloudlike cumulus type of calcification
- Myositis ossificans
- Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva
- Soft-tissue osteoma
- Extraskeletal osteosarcoma
- Myositis ossificans variants
- Panniculitis ossificans
- Fasciitis ossificans
- Fibroosseous pseudotumor of digits
- CARTILAGINOUS SOFT-TISSUE TUMORS
√ arcs and rings, spicules and floccules of calcification
- Synovial osteochondromatosis
- Soft-tissue chondroma
- Extraskeletal chondrosarcoma
DDx:
- Synovial sarcoma
- Benign mesenchymoma
= lipoma with chondroid / osseous metaplasia - Malignant mesenchymoma
= 2 or more unrelated sarcomatous components - Calcified / ossified tophus of gout
- Ossified soft-tissue masses of melorheostosis
- Tumoral calcinosis
- Pilomatricoma = calcifying epithelioma of Malherbe
- lesion arises from hair matrix cells with slow growth confined to the subcutaneous tissue of the face, neck, upper extremities
- central sandlike calcifications (84%)
- peripheral ossification (20%)
Soft-tissue Uptake of Bone Agents
- Physiologic
- Breast
- Kidney: accentuated uptake with dehydration, antineoplastic drugs, gentamicin
- Bowel: surgical diversion of urinary tract
- Faulty preparation with radiochemical impurity
- free pertechnetate (TcO4-)
- Cause: introduction of air into the reaction vial
- activity in mouth (saliva), salivary glands, thyroid, stomach (mucus-producing cells), GI tract (direct secretion + intestinal transport from gastric juices), choroid plexus
- 99mTc-MDP colloid
- Cause: excess aluminum ions in generator eluate / patient ingestion of antacids; hydrolysis of stannous chloride to stannous hydroxide, excess hydrolyzed technetium
- diffuse activity in liver + spleen
- Neoplastic condition
- benign tumor
- Tumoral calcinosis
- Myositis ossificans
- primary malignant neoplasm
- Extraskeletal osteosarcoma / soft-tissue sarcoma: bone forming
- Neuroblastoma (3574%): calcifying tumor
- Breast carcinoma
- Meningioma
- Bronchogenic carcinoma (rare)
- Pericardial tumor
- metastases with extraosseous activity
- to liver: mucinous carcinoma of colon, breast carcinoma, lung cancer, osteosarcoma
mnemonic: LE COMBO
- Lung cancer
- Esophageal carcinoma
- Colon carcinoma
- Oat cell carcinoma
- Melanoma
- Breast carcinoma
- Osteogenic sarcoma
- to lung: 2040% of osteosarcomas metastatic to lung demonstrate 99mTc-MDP uptake
- Malignant pleural effusion, ascites, pericardial effusion
- Inflammation
- Inflammatory process (abscess, pyogenic / fungal infection):
- adsorption onto calcium deposits
- binding to denatured proteins, iron deposits, immature collagen
- hyperemia
- Crystalline arthropathy (eg, gout)
- Dermatomyositis, scleroderma
- Radiation: eg, radiation pneumonitis
- Necrotizing enterocolitis
- Diffuse pericarditis
- Bursitis
- Pneumonia
- Trauma
- Healing soft-tissue wounds
- Rhabdomyolysis:
- crush injury, surgical trauma, electrical burns, frostbite, severe exercise, alcohol abuse
- Intramuscular injection sites:
- especially Imferon® (= iron dextran) injections with resultant chemisorption; meperidine
- Ischemic bowel infarction (late uptake)
- Hematoma: soft tissue, subdural
- Heterotopic ossification
- Myocardial contusion, defibrillation, unstable angina pectoris
- Lymphedema
- Metabolic
- Hypercalcemia (eg, hyperparathyroidism):
- uptake enhanced by alkaline environment in stomach (gastric mucosa), lung (alveolar walls), kidneys (renal tubules)
- uptake with severe disease in myocardium, spleen, diaphragm, thyroid, skeletal muscle
- Diffuse interstitial pulmonary calcifications: hyperparathyroidism, mitral stenosis
- Amyloid deposits
- Ischemia / necrosis with dystrophic soft-tissue calcifications
- Spleen: infarct (sickle cell anemia in 50%), microcalcifications ← lymphoma, thalassemia major, hemosiderosis, glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase deficiency
- Liver: massive hepatic necrosis
- Heart: transmural myocardial infarction, valvular calcification, amyloid deposition
- Muscle: traumatic / ischemic skeletal muscle injury
- Brain: cerebral infarction (damage of blood-brain barrier)
- Kidney: nephrocalcinosis
- Vessels: calcified wall, calcified thrombus
Soft-tissue Calcification
Metastatic / Metabolic Calcification
= deposit of calcium salts in normal tissue
- as a result of elevation of Ca x P product above 6070
- with normal Ca x P product after renal transplant
Location: lung (alveolar septa, bronchial wall, vessel wall), kidney, gastric mucosa, heart, peripheral vessels
Cause:
- Skeletal deossification
- 1° HPT
- Ectopic HPT production (lung / kidney tumor)
- Renal osteodystrophy + 2° HPT
- Hypoparathyroidism
- Prolonged immobilization
- Massive bone destruction
- Widespread bone metastases
- Plasma cell myeloma
- Leukemia
- Hypercalcemia
- Primary hyperparathyroidism
- Hypervitaminosis D
- Milk-alkali syndrome
- Sarcoidosis
- Hydroxyapatite deposition disease
- IV administration of calcium salts
- Idiopathic hypercalcemia
- Hyperuricemia
- Tophaceous gout
Dystrophic Calcification
= deposit of calcium salts in tissue damaged by injury / inflammation (with local electrolyte / enzyme alterations) in presence of normal serum Ca + P level
Cause:
- Metabolic disorder without hypercalcemia
- Renal osteodystrophy with 2° HPT
- Hypoparathyroidism
- Pseudohypoparathyroidism
- Pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism
- Gout
- Pseudogout = chondrocalcinosis
- Ochronosis = alkaptonuria
- Diabetes mellitus
- Connective tissue disorder
- Scleroderma = progressive systemic sclerosis
- Dermato- and polymyositis
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Mixed connective tissue disorders
- Trauma
- Neuropathic calcifications
- Frostbite
- Myositis ossificans progressiva
- Infestation
- Cysticercosis
- Dracunculosis (guinea worm)
- Loiasis
- Bancroft filariasis
- Hydatid disease
- Leprosy
- Vascular disease
- Atherosclerosis
- Media sclerosis (Mönckeberg)
DDx of Soft-Tissue Calcifications
Metastatic Calcifications | Dystrophic Calcifications | Calcinosis |
---|
Hyperpara-thyroidism | Soft-tissue tumor: lipoma, sarcomas (synovial, osteo~, chondro~) | Idiopathic tumoral calcinosis | Hypopara-thyroidism | Inherited disorder: Ehlers-Danlos, pseudoxanthoma | Calcinosis interstitialis universalis | Milk-alkali syndrome | Parasitic infection | Calcinosis in SLE, scleroderma, juvenile dermatomyositis | Excessive vitamin D | Tophaceous gout | | Sarcoidosis | | | Paraneoplastic hypercalcemia | | | Destructive bone disease | | |
|
- Venous calcifications
- Tissue infarction (eg, myocardial infarction)
- Miscellaneous
- Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
- Pseudoxanthoma elasticum
- Werner syndrome = progeria
- Calcinosis (circumscripta, universalis, tumoral calcinosis)
- Neoplastic disease
- Synovial sarcoma
- Osteosarcoma
- Chondrosarcoma
- Necrotic tumor
- Degenerative disease
- Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease
- Calcific tendonitis (in 3% of adults)
Location: shoulder >hip >elbow >wrist >knee - Calcific bursitis
- Metaplasia
- Synovial osteochondromatosis
Generalized Calcinosis
- Collagen vascular disorders
- Scleroderma
- Dermatomyositis
- Idiopathic calcinosis universalis
Idiopathic Calcification
- Tumoral calcinosis
- normal calcium + elevated phosphate levels
Interstitial Calcinosis
Calcinosis Circumscripta
- firm white commonly ulcerating dermal papules / plaques / subcutaneous nodules extruding a chalky white material of hydroxyapatite
- Acrosclerosis: granular deposits around joints of fingers and toes, fingertips
- Scleroderma + CREST syndrome: acrosclerosis and absorption of ends of distal phalanges
- Dermatomyositis: extensive subcutaneous deposits
- Varicosities: particularly in calf
- 1° Hyperparathyroidism: infrequently periarticular calcinosis
- Renal osteodystrophy with 2° hyperparathyroidism: extensive vascular deposits even in young individuals
- Hypoparathyroidism: occasionally around joints; symmetrical in basal ganglia
- Vitamin D intoxication: periarticular in rheumatoid arthritis (puttylike); calcium deposit in tophi
Calcinosis Universalis
= progressive disease of unknown origin
Age: children + young adults
Associated with: poly- and dermatomyositis
- diffuse plaque- / sheetlike calcium deposits in skin and subcutis; sometimes in tendons + muscles + fascia
- NO true bone formation
Soft-tissue Ossification
= formation of trabecular bone
- Myositis ossificans progressiva / circumscripta
- Paraosteoarthropathy
- Soft-tissue osteosarcoma
- Parosteal osteosarcoma
- Posttraumatic periostitis = periosteoma
- Surgical scar
- Severely burned patient
Connective Tissue Disease
= CTD = [COLLAGEN VASCULAR DISEASE]
= heterogeneous group of immunologically mediated systemic inflammatory disorders that may affect various organs but share a number of clinical + laboratory features
- Features:
- relatively specific: arthritis, myositis, Raynaud phenomenon with digital ulceration, tethered skin in extremities + trunk, malar rash sparing nasolabial folds, morning stiffness
- relatively nonspecific: polyarthralgias (most common initial symptom), myalgias, mottling of extremities, muscle weakness + tenderness
- Laboratory findings:
- relatively specific: ANA in peripheral rim / nucleolar pattern, anti-DNA, elevated muscle enzyme
- relatively nonspecific: ANA in homogeneous pattern, anti-single-stranded DNA, positive rheumatoid factor
Types and most distinctive features:
- Rheumatoid arthritis positive rheumatoid factor, prominent morning stiffness, symmetric erosive arthritis
- Systemic lupus erythematosus malar rash, photosensitivity, serositis, renal disorders with hemolytic anemia, leukopenia, lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, positive ANA
- Sjögren syndrome dry eyes + mouth, abnormal Schirmer test
- Progressive systemic sclerosis
- Raynaud phenomenon, skin thickening of distal extremities proceeding to include proximal extremities + chest + abdomen, positive ANA in a nucleolar pattern
- Polymyositis, dermatomyositis heliotrope rash over eyes, proximal muscle weakness, elevated muscle enzymes, inflammation at muscle biopsy
- Mixed connective tissue disease
Thoracic imaging pattern: (see table)
Muscle
MR signal intensity of normal muscle:
- higher than water + lower than fat on T1WI
- much lower than water + fat on T2WI
Intramuscular Mass
- NEOPLASM
- INFECTION / INFLAMMATION
- Intramuscular abscess
- Focal myositis = benign inflammatory pseudotumor
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Sarcoidosis
- nodules with central star-shaped area of fibrosis surrounded by granuloma
- MYONECROSIS
- Sickle cell crisis
- Poorly controlled diabetes
- Compartment syndrome
- Crush injury
- Severe ischemia
- Intraarterial chemotherapy
- Rhabdomyolysis = severe muscle injury with loss of integrity of muscle cell membranes
- Cause: trauma, severe exercise, ischemia, burn, toxin, IV heparin therapy, autoimmune inflammation
- Cx: renal damage from myoglobulinemia, tetany, compartment syndrome
- TRAUMA
- Intramuscular hematoma (eg, severe muscle strain, laceration, contusion, spontaneous)
- Myositis ossificans traumatica
Frequency of Thoracic CT Findings of Connective Tissue Disease
| Mixed Connective Tissue Disease | Dermatomyositis Polymyositis | Progressive Systemic Sclerosis | Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis | Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) |
---|
Ground-glass opacity | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | Septal thickening | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | Honeycombing | +++ | + | ++++ | + | + | Consolidation | + | +++ | + | + | ++++ | Crazy paving | — | — | — | — | ++ | Pulmonary nodules | — | — | — | ++ | — | Pleural / pericardial effusions | ++ | — | + | ++++ | ++++ | Progressive ↓ of lung volume | + | + | + | ++ | ++ | Pulmonary embolism | — | — | — | — | + | MPA dilatation | + | + | ++ | + | + |
|
Pulmonary Manifestations of Collagen Vascular Disease
Type | UIP | NSIP | COP | LIP | DAD | Hemorrhage | Airway disease |
---|
Rheumatoid arthritis | +++ | ++ | ++ | + | + | | +++ | Progressive systemic sclerosis | + | +++ | + | | + | | | Dermato- / polymyositis | + | +++ | +++ | | ++ | | | Sjögren syndrome | ++ | ++ | | ++ | + | _ | + | Mixed connective tissue disease | + | ++ | + | | | | | Systemic lupus erythematosus | + | ++ | + | + | ++ | +++ | |
|
COP = Crytpogenic Organizing Pneumonia, DAD = Diffuse Alveolar Damage, LIP = Lymphocytic Interstitial Pneumonia, NSIP = Nonspecific Interstitial Pneumonia, UIP = Usual Interstitial Pneumonia
Thoracic Manifestations of Collagen Vascular Disease
| Ankylosing Spondylitis | Dermatomyositis Polymyositis | Progressive Systemic Sclerosis | Rheumatoid Arthritis | Sjögren Syndrome | Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) |
---|
Pulmonary fibrosis | occasional | common | frequent | frequent | occasional | occasional | Pleural disease | — | — | — | frequent | — | frequent | Diaphragm weakness | — | frequent | — | — | — | frequent | Aspiration pneumonia | — | frequent | frequent | — | — | — | Bronchiectasis | — | — | — | occasional | common | — | Apical fibrosis | frequent | — | — | — | — | — | Bronchiolitis obliterans | — | — | — | common | — | — | BOOP | — | common | — | common | — | — |
|
Muscle Edema
√muscle hyperintensity on STIR images
- INFLAMMATION
- Dermatomyositis
- Polymyositis
- Radiation therapy: straight sharp margins, involves muscle + subcutaneous fat
- Early stage of myositis ossificans
- CELLULAR INFILTRATE
- Lymphoma
- INFECTION
- Bacterial / infectious myositis
- direct extension from adjacent infection (eg, osteomyelitis, subcutaneous abscess)
- hematogenous
- Inclusion body myositis (probably due to paramyxovirus infection) resembling polymyositis
- RHABDOMYOLYSIS
- Sport / electric injury
- Diabetic muscular infarction
- Focal nodular myositis
- Metabolic myopathy: eg, phosphofructokinase deficiency, hypokalemia, alcohol overdose
- Viral myositis
- TRAUMA
- Subacute muscle denervation
Time of onset: 24 weeks after denervation
Mechanism:
- spinal cord injury, poliomyelitis, peripheral nerve injury / compression (ganglion cyst, bone spur), Graves disease, neuritis
- Muscle contusion (from direct blow)
- Muscle strain (= injury at musculotendinous junction from overly forceful muscle contraction)
Predilection for: hamstring, gastrocnemius m., biceps brachii m.) - Delayed-onset muscle soreness
= overuse injury becoming symptomatic hours / days after overuse episode - Compartment syndrome
= increased pressure within indistensible space of confining fascia leading to venous occlusion, muscle + nerve ischemia, arterial occlusion, tissue necrosis
Cause: trauma, burns, heavy exercise, extrinsic pressure, intramuscular hemorrhage
- severe pain
- dysfunction of sensory + motor nerves passing through affected compartment
Rx: urgent fasciotomy - Sickle cell crisis
Fatty Infiltration of Muscle
- Chronic stage of muscle denervation (eg, poliomyelitis, stroke, peripheral nerve injury)
- Chronic disuse (eg, chronic tendon tear, severe osteoarthritis)
- Late stage of severe muscle injury
- Long-term high-dose corticosteroid medication affecting truncal muscles
Outline