Radiology of bone lacunae can help differentiate between smouldering and symptomatic myeloma. CT seems to be more apt for this purpose than a standard X-ray but appropriate principles must be applied when performing and reading it. Lesions visible in an MRI above all allow myelomas to be monitored during treatment. Because of the radiation dose, whole body CT must be performed with a slice thickness of 2mm, increments of 1.5 and intensity of 40mAs. It should be read associating the reading of the axial slices with reading the mean coronal and sagittal projections of a thickness of 2cm. Whole body MRI must associate T1-weighted sagittal, STIR coronal and b-800 diffusion-weighted axial sequences. Changes in the disease correlate with changes in the diffusion, STIR and T1-weighted images interpreted together. While whole body CT has a place in clinical routine, the indication for whole body MRI still needs to be clarified and has yet to take its place in research protocols.
A 55-year-old man was hospitalized for a low back pain lasting for 3 months. Spinal MRI revealed a suggestive aspect of multilevel discitis L5-S1-S2 with paravertebral abscess. A thoraco-abdominal CT scan confirmed the presence of multiple pathological lymph nodes in several locations, bilateral micronodular pulmonary infiltrate; it also showed mirror bone erosions of vertebral L5 and S1 endplates, suggestive of disseminated tuberculosis with lung involvement and lymphadenopathy. A discovertebral L5-S1 biopsy was performed confirming the diagnosis of metastatic prostatic adenocarcinoma including a tumor infiltration of the intervertebral disc, without arguments for a septic processus superimposed without tuberculosis granuloma. Although rare, cases of metastases located at the disco-vertebral junction including prostatic cancer have already been described, and should be known to the clinician. The differential diagnosis with an infectious spondylodiscitis can be difficult in some case around the vertebral disc and in case of epiduritis and soft tissues involvement on MRI sequences. Disco-vertebral biopsy remains the cornerstone of the diagnosis.
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