Tomography (Feb 2022)

Osteoid Osteoma in an Adult Wheelchair Basketball Player Mimicking Musculoskeletal Shoulder Pain: Red Flag or a Red Herring?

  • Filippo Maselli,
  • Lorenzo Storari,
  • Mariangela Lorusso,
  • Firas Mourad,
  • Denis Pennella,
  • Valerio Barbari,
  • Mattia Salomon,
  • Fabrizio Brindisino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tomography8010032
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 389 – 401

Abstract

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Osteoid osteoma (OO) is a relatively common, benign bone-forming tumour, which mainly occurs on the long tubular bones of the limbs in adolescents. Usually, the OO is classified based on its localisation. Night-time pain is the major symptom of OO, which is commonly relieved using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, while surgery is required only for those patients with severe pain or in case of failure of previous conservative treatments. Our case report describes a 56-year-old male basketball player who self-referred to our outpatient physical therapy with a shoulder pain complaint. Considering the anamnesis and the physical examination, the physical therapist referred the patient to an orthopaedic surgeon, who suggested a detailed imaging investigation. The peculiarity of this clinical case is the overlapping of two clinical presentations: the symptomatology of the OO and the concurrent mechanical disorder due to a rotator cuff tendinopathy.

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