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Painful transient edema in the tibial diaphysis: the challenges and the essence of biopsy in treatment.

BACKGROUND: Some patients experience a non-traumatic pain in the tibial diaphysis similar to that in the clinical and radiological findings of a tumor, an infection or a stress fracture and cannot be definitively diagnosed even after biopsy. In this study, our aim was to exhibit the challenges in the diagnosis of this patient group and to evaluate this type of patients with a limited population in the literature.

METHODS: Eighteen extremities of 16 patients, whose complaints of non-traumatic pain in the tibial diaphysis were evaluated by our tumor council and T2-weighted MR scans of the medullary bone had shown hyperintense signal changes or tumor-like appearances, were evaluated with histological, radiological, and clinical results.

RESULTS: Lesions were detected in 18 extremities of the 16 patients (seven males, nine females; mean age 23 [range 7 to 51] years). Four of the lesions were in the right tibial diaphysis, ten were in the left, and two were bilateral. Laboratory findings of the patients were normal. Based on the decision of the tumor council, biopsy was performed on 12 patients. All patients' complaints were gone and MRI findings decreased during the follow-up period. The complaints of the three patients who did not have a biopsy decreased after a mean period of three months.

CONCLUSIONS: Medullary stress syndrome has been reported in the literature in various forms and in a limited number of cases, including longitudinal stress fracture and transient medullary edema of the bone. In light of our findings, we deduced that biopsy of the diaphyseal lesions in this patient group is essential and that the complaints of this patient group declined in the earlier term in comparison to the patients who were not performed biopsy.

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