Radiology Case Reports (Feb 2021)
Fibrous dysplasia of the clivus – A case study and literature review
Abstract
Fibrous dysplasia is a benign, congenital skeletal disorder which leads to the formation of fibro-osseous intramedullary bone lesions. Clival fibrous dysplasia is a rare variant which commonly presents asymptomatically with no findings on examination and is often picked up incidentally on radiological investigation. A 39-year-old female presented with a sudden onset headache of 3 days’ duration alongside diplopia and right lower limb weakness upon examination. Computerized tomography head scan revealed an expansile clivus with a ground-glass appearance, magnetic resonance imaging brain scan revealed a predominantly hypointense signal on T1- and T2-weighted images and subsequent whole-body bone imaging confirmed the diagnosis of monostotic clival fibrous dysplasia. This case highlights the importance of considering monostotic clival fibrous dysplasia as a differential diagnosis in patients presenting with sudden onset symptoms of headache alongside cranial and peripheral nerve involvement, when other more sinister causes have been excluded.