Skip to main content

Table 7 Mimickers

From: The role of magnetic resonance imaging in the evaluation of bone tumours and tumour-like lesions

Condition

Explanation

Distinguishing features/recommendations

Osteomyelitis

(Figs. 28 and 29)

Aggressive aspect

Usually involves the metaphysis in children

Small/absent soft tissue component

Penumbra sign*

Fistulous tracts

- clinical features**

Eosinophilic granuloma (EG)

Aggressive aspect

Can be very difficult or even impossible to distinguish from malignant lesions in young patients

EG of the spine shows preservation of terminal end plates, disks and posterior elements (Fig. 30)

Stress lesions

(Figs. 31 and 32)

-Elderly patients with insufficiency fractures

, fatigue fractures

Hypointense line extending from the cortex into the medullary area on T1- and T2WI

Surrounding oedema [15]

, Absence of focal lesion or soft tissue mass [15]

Bone infarcts and osteonecrosis

Early osteonecrosis may result in a poorly defined region of lucency simulating a tumour in radiographs

, Calcifications can simulate those of chondroid lesions

Usually manifests as a well-defined linear serpentine rim of low signal intensity on T1WI. On T2WI the rim may have low signal intensity, high signal intensity or both (“double line” sign)

Chondroid lesions show peripheral lobulations with T2 hyperintensity

Myositis ossificans

(Fig. 33)

Can have a disorganised amorphous bone formation similar to osteosarcoma [19, 44]

Usually separated from the cortex

Evolves to mature ossification

Haematopoietic marrow

(Fig. 34)

Axial skeleton, thoracic grid, pelvis and extremities of long bones can maintain areas of haematopoietic marrow even after skeletal maturity [15] (this can simulate marrow infiltration in T1WI and cause high signal on STIR)

Signal intensity > than that of muscle on T1WI

Presence of microscopic fat (>50 % drop in signal in opposed-phase) [15]

Aggressive osteoporosis

Sudden immobilisation can cause bone demineralisation, with oedema mimicking diffuse tumoral infiltration

Preferential locations: subchondral bone, tendon and ligamentar insertions

  1. *The “penumbra sign” on MRI is a rim with higher signal intensity than that of the main abscess on T1WI. It is helpful in distinguishing between subacute osteomyelitis from other osseous lesions [45]
  2. **Rapid onset of fever, localised pain and oedema; 50 % of cases show positive blood cultures