“Lytic” lesions in autologous bone grafts: demonstration of medullary air pockets on post mortem computed tomography |
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Authors: | A. Rotman K. Hamilton C. O’Donnell |
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Affiliation: | (1) University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia;(2) Donor Tissue Bank of Victoria, Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, Melbourne, Australia;(3) Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, Melbourne, Australia |
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Abstract: | Donor bone grafts are an important aspect of orthopaedic surgery. The use of plain film as a pathological screening tool before donor bone dispatch has revealed “lytic” lesions in proximal humeri. Donor demographics did not support the diagnosis of myeloma and subsequent computed tomography (CT) scans of these bones identified the lesions as air, not pathology. In total, 27 long bones were scanned and 100% (27/27 cases) exhibited air within the trabecular bone. Three distinct patterns were found: ovoid, linear/branching, and broad channel. A longitudinal course of CT scans was performed to identify at which stage air appeared within the bone. Pre-retrieval, preprocessing, and postprocessing scans revealed that air originated between the retrieval and preprocessing stages of donor bone preparation. There may be multiple aetiology of this phenomenon, including bone retrieval and natural decomposition. |
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Keywords: | Bone Allografts Donor CT Lytic lesions Myeloma Air Processing Long bone Forensic Radiology |
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