The sphenoid bone is a complex structure in terms of its embryological origin. At birth, the sphenoid sinus is not pneumatised. Pneumatisation begins at around 4 months of age until the age of 12–14 years.
If this process is absent or interrupted for reasons that are often unknown, it is called arrested pneumatisation.
This report describes the case of a 15 year old patient, who consulted an ENT specialist for chronic headaches and hearing loss on the left side. Clinical ENT examination (including otoscopy) is normal. Tonal audiometry revealed a sensorineural hearing loss in the left ear. A CT scan of the petrous bone was normal but revealed a hypodense lesion in the left sphenoid bone. Lipoma was suggested. A brain MRI was performed in a clinic to better characterize the lesion. MR images showed a well-defined lesion with fatty content. The diagnosis was nasosinus fibrous dysplasia.
In view of the diagnostic discrepancy, the patient was referred to our department for a specialist opinion. An additional brain scan revealed a non-eroded, non-expansive fatty density lesion with well-defined internal curvilinear calcification in the left sphenoid sinus location. Our final diagnosis was arrested pneumatisation.
Most patients with arrested pneumatization of the skull base are asymptomatic. Sometimes it may be revealed by nonspecific signs and be confused with severe skull base disease, especially if the radiologist is not familiar with its existence or its typical features.
Bipartite patella is a normal variation in ossification development. This variation is usually asymptomatic but can cause persistent and debilitating anterior knee pain with an injury.
We report the case of a 56-year-old man complaining of persistent anterior left knee pain following trauma.
Standard knee radiographs show a bilateral Bipartite Patella appearance, and magnetic resonance imaging shows discrete bony edema of the cancellous bone of the accessory bone and about the synchondrosis explaining the anterior knee pain, associated with a crack in the posterior compartment of the medial meniscus.
Conservative care including medical treatment with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, physical therapy was used.
Magnetic resonance imaging is the most valuable diagnostic tool for evaluating detailed morphologic and pathologic changes in patients with the bipartite patella.
Introduction: Chondrosarcoma is a tumour with a cartilaginous matrix frequently encountered in long bones and the pelvis with rare sinonasal location. Patient and methods: We report the case of a 25-year-old patient who was referred to us for an extension work-up for sinonasal chondrosarcoma confirmed by anatomopathological examination. Results: Facial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) confirmed by a CT scan showed an osteolytic tumour process of the hard palate and walls of the left maxillary sinus that was locally advanced. Conclusion: The sinonasal location of a chondrosarcoma is rare. Characterized by cross-sectional imaging, confirmation was provided by histological assessment.
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