HOME

 

 

Back

Imaging techniques

 Nonossifying Fibroma
 authors, Wei Zhang MD , John N. Morelli, MD







A B C D
  •  
     

Clinical History:
This 23-year-old woman presented to clinic complaining of right thigh pain over the last year, worse with weightbearing and at night. The subsequent plain film radiograph and MR examination revealed a lesion within the distal femoral metadiaphysis. Biopsy showed findings consistent with a nonossifying fibroma.

Diagnosis:
Nonossifying fibroma

MR Technique:
Scans were acquired on a 3 T Siemens Verio MR unit. (A) Coronal pre-contrast turbo spin echo fat-suppressed T2-weighted (TR/TE 4000/100 ms, scan time 2:20 min:sec) images were obtained as well as (B) coronal spin echo T1-weighted (TR/TE 672/21 ms, scan time 4:57 min:sec) images, and (C) coronal post-contrast spin echo fat-suppressed T1-weighted images. Slice thickness was 3 mm in each instance.

Imaging Findings:
An approximately 3 by 2 cm distal femoral shaft mass exhibits low and high signal intensity on T1 and T2-weighted images, respectively. This lesion demonstrates a sclerotic, expansile appearance on plain film radiography. No cortical disruption is apparent, and although the lesion itself enhances, no associated enhancing soft tissue mass is present.

Imaging Techniques
Clinical Updates

Clinical Cases

Search Clinical-MRI.com