1. Imaging of giant cell tumour of the tendon sheath.
- Author
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Wan JM, Magarelli N, Peh WC, Guglielmi G, and Shek TW
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Differential, Echo-Planar Imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neoplasms, Connective Tissue pathology, Predictive Value of Tests, Sensitivity and Specificity, Synovitis, Pigmented Villonodular pathology, Tendons diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Giant Cell Tumors diagnosis, Neoplasms, Connective Tissue diagnosis, Synovitis, Pigmented Villonodular diagnosis, Tendons pathology
- Abstract
Giant cell tumours of the tendon sheath (GCTTS) and pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) are part of a spectrum of benign proliferative lesions of synovial origin that may affect the joints, bursae and tendon sheaths. This review article describes the clinicopathological features and imaging findings in patients with GCTTS. GCTTS usually presents as a soft tissue mass with pressure erosion of the underlying bone. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of GCTTS typically shows low to intermediate signal on T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo sequences due to the presence of haemosiderin, which exerts a paramagnetic effect. On gradient-echo sequences, the paramagnetic effect of haemosiderin is further exaggerated, resulting in areas of very low signal due to the blooming artefact. Ultrasonography shows a soft mass related to the tendon sheath that is hypervascular on colour or power Doppler imaging.
- Published
- 2010
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