Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease

Introduction: The vertebra is the most frequent location for skeletal metastases. Thyroid carcinoma is one of the commonest primary sites that metastasized to the bone. Metastasis to the thoracic vertebra is commoner compared to lumbar and cervical areas. Clinical diagnoses are difficult when adult...

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Main Authors: Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff, Johari, Joehaimey, Omar, Ahmad Sabri, Zakaria@Mohamad, Zamzuri, Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril, Abd. Aziz, Azian
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/2/APMSTS_2014_-_POSTER_-_BONE_%26_THYROID.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/6/Sharifudin.pdf
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spelling iium-363522018-06-19T08:24:48Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/ Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff Johari, Joehaimey Omar, Ahmad Sabri Zakaria@Mohamad, Zamzuri Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril Abd. Aziz, Azian RB Pathology RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer) RD701 Orthopedics Introduction: The vertebra is the most frequent location for skeletal metastases. Thyroid carcinoma is one of the commonest primary sites that metastasized to the bone. Metastasis to the thoracic vertebra is commoner compared to lumbar and cervical areas. Clinical diagnoses are difficult when adult patients present with concurrent involvement of the thyroid gland and the thoracic vertebra. Methodology: We report two cases of adult presented with back pain in the thoracic region with profound neurological deficit. Both cases had involvement of the thyroid gland as well; the first patient had history of thyroid carcinoma and the other was an incidental finding. Clinically, their presentation mimicked the manifestation of metastatic spine disease. In both cases, two distinct diagnoses of benign bone lesions that are uncommon in adults were confirmed on histopathological evaluation. Results: The first case was a 53-year-old lady who presented with an 8-month history of pain in the thoracic region with paraparesis, which required assistance for ambulation. She had undergone total thyroidectomy for papillary thyroid carcinoma one year prior to her current problem. There was an isolated osteolytic lesion over the posterior element of T12 vertebra with narrowing of the spinal canal causing compression to the cord on MR imaging. CT-guided biopsy did not obtain any malignant cells. Posterior decompression with fusion and stabilization between T10 to L2 with pedicle screw system was performed. Posterior element of T12 and bilateral erector spinae muscles sent for histopathological evaluation and the diagnosis of fibrous dysplasia was made. Patient’s condition improved gradually until her recent follow up one year following her surgery. The second case is a 37-year-old man presenting with profound quadriparesis and incidental thyroid involvement. MR imaging and skeletal radiographs revealed widespread involvement of the spine. The patient underwent surgical resection of the tumour and stabilization of the spine. Diagnosis was confirmed by histological and immunohistochemistry analysis. Conclusion: These cases illustrate that osteolytic lesion of the vertebrae should be evaluated with detailed radiological and histopathological examination before an empirical diagnosis of spinal metastasis is made in adult patients presenting with features of metastatic spine disease. 2014-04 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/2/APMSTS_2014_-_POSTER_-_BONE_%26_THYROID.pdf application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/6/Sharifudin.pdf Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff and Johari, Joehaimey and Omar, Ahmad Sabri and Zakaria@Mohamad, Zamzuri and Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril and Abd. Aziz, Azian (2014) Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease. In: 10th Annual Asia Pacific Musculoskeletal Tumour Society (APMSTS) Scientific Meeting, 9-11 April 2014, Grand Hyatt Melbourne Australia. http://apmsts2014.aoa.org.au/home/4580752646
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
English
topic RB Pathology
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
RD701 Orthopedics
spellingShingle RB Pathology
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
RD701 Orthopedics
Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
Johari, Joehaimey
Omar, Ahmad Sabri
Zakaria@Mohamad, Zamzuri
Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril
Abd. Aziz, Azian
Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
description Introduction: The vertebra is the most frequent location for skeletal metastases. Thyroid carcinoma is one of the commonest primary sites that metastasized to the bone. Metastasis to the thoracic vertebra is commoner compared to lumbar and cervical areas. Clinical diagnoses are difficult when adult patients present with concurrent involvement of the thyroid gland and the thoracic vertebra. Methodology: We report two cases of adult presented with back pain in the thoracic region with profound neurological deficit. Both cases had involvement of the thyroid gland as well; the first patient had history of thyroid carcinoma and the other was an incidental finding. Clinically, their presentation mimicked the manifestation of metastatic spine disease. In both cases, two distinct diagnoses of benign bone lesions that are uncommon in adults were confirmed on histopathological evaluation. Results: The first case was a 53-year-old lady who presented with an 8-month history of pain in the thoracic region with paraparesis, which required assistance for ambulation. She had undergone total thyroidectomy for papillary thyroid carcinoma one year prior to her current problem. There was an isolated osteolytic lesion over the posterior element of T12 vertebra with narrowing of the spinal canal causing compression to the cord on MR imaging. CT-guided biopsy did not obtain any malignant cells. Posterior decompression with fusion and stabilization between T10 to L2 with pedicle screw system was performed. Posterior element of T12 and bilateral erector spinae muscles sent for histopathological evaluation and the diagnosis of fibrous dysplasia was made. Patient’s condition improved gradually until her recent follow up one year following her surgery. The second case is a 37-year-old man presenting with profound quadriparesis and incidental thyroid involvement. MR imaging and skeletal radiographs revealed widespread involvement of the spine. The patient underwent surgical resection of the tumour and stabilization of the spine. Diagnosis was confirmed by histological and immunohistochemistry analysis. Conclusion: These cases illustrate that osteolytic lesion of the vertebrae should be evaluated with detailed radiological and histopathological examination before an empirical diagnosis of spinal metastasis is made in adult patients presenting with features of metastatic spine disease.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
Johari, Joehaimey
Omar, Ahmad Sabri
Zakaria@Mohamad, Zamzuri
Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril
Abd. Aziz, Azian
author_facet Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
Johari, Joehaimey
Omar, Ahmad Sabri
Zakaria@Mohamad, Zamzuri
Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril
Abd. Aziz, Azian
author_sort Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
title Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
title_short Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
title_full Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
title_fullStr Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
title_full_unstemmed Concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. Report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
title_sort concurrent involvement of bone and thyroid gland. report of two cases of benign spinal lesion mimicking metastatic spine disease
publishDate 2014
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/2/APMSTS_2014_-_POSTER_-_BONE_%26_THYROID.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/36352/6/Sharifudin.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T20:52:04Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T20:52:04Z
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