|
(i) Younger patients (casual finding in adults) |
(i) Patients over 25 years old |
History and physical examination |
(ii) Seldom painful |
(ii) Inflammatory pain |
(iii) Appendicular skeleton almost exclusively (when in phalanx, E almost 100%) |
(iii) In axial skeleton, a chondral tumor is always a chondrosarcoma until the opposite is proven |
|
(iv) In general size <5 cm |
(iv) Tends to be bigger than 5 cm |
|
|
(i) Normally intramedullary (except for enchondroma protuberans) |
(i) Intramedullary |
|
(ii) No periosteal reaction |
(ii) periosteal reaction and associated microfractures |
Imaging |
(iii) No endosteal scalloping (or minimal) |
(iii) Frequent endosteal scalloping |
|
(iv) No changes during the followup |
(iv) Changes over time, such as calcifications disappearance, indicating malignization |
|
(v) No soft tissue mass |
(v) Soft tissue mass |
|
|
(i) Typical encasement pattern |
(i) Invades Haversian system |
|
(ii) No endosteal scal loping |
(ii) periosteal reaction with endosteal scalloping |
Biopsy |
(iii) Multinodular aspect |
(iii) Ocasional necrotic and haemorraghical focii |
|
(iv) Surrounded by lamellar bone |
(iv) Invades bone marrow |
|
(v) Does not invade bone marrow |
(v) Generally a single mass |