Radiology Case Reports (Dec 2022)

Two case reports showing a rather striking abnormal finding of unknown origin localized to the cortex of an amputated femur

  • Masafumi Sakai, MD,
  • Hirotaka Mutsuzaki, MD,
  • Yukiyo Shimizu, MD,
  • Yoshikazu Okamoto, MD,
  • Takahito Nakajima, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
pp. 4874 – 4878

Abstract

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MRI scans of patients who have undergone leg amputation are rarely obtained; such scans may be performed when a mass is suspected to be related to the amputation or when inflammation (infection) is suspected, but the number of such cases is not large. In this study, however, we encountered 2 very striking cases in which short-tau inversion recovery coronal images taken for different purposes coincidentally showed a diffuse high signal intensity of the residual femoral cortex on the side wearing the artificial limb. Further examination of these images revealed that the superior margins of the artificial limb cup and the abnormal signal were almost identical and that the signal was only observed in the residual femur of the side using the artificial limb, suggesting that the change was caused by artificial limb usage. Despite the difficulty in imaging-pathologic correlation because the patients were still alive, we considered that the high signal was related to the characteristic microanatomy of the bone cortex and the mechanical changes caused by the effects of artificial limb usage on the residual femur. The 2 patients have not shown any specific events since then. Thus, while the residual femoral cortex may show findings of interest, these findings do not seem to require any specific treatment.

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