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1/2. Symptomatic giant (10-cm) bone island of the tibia.

    A bone island represents a focus of mature compact bone within the cancellous bone, and it can be diagnosed based on characteristic clinical and radiologic features. The lesion is typically asymptomatic with a preference for the pelvis, femur, and other long bones. On radiographs, the lesion appears as an ovoid, round or oblong homogeneously dense and sclerotic focus in the cancellous bone. The characteristic features of this lesion are radiating bony streaks, known as thorny radiations or pseudopodia. Most bone islands are small, and the majority of these lesions measure from 0.1 to 2.0 cm. A giant bone island, defined as having a diameter greater than 2 cm, has been rarely reported in the English-language literature. We report here on a case of a giant bone island that measured 10 x 1.7 x 1 cm in the diaphysis of the right tibia in a 31-year-old man who complained of right lower leg pain for 3 weeks.
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ranking = 1
keywords = island
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2/2. Giant bone island of femur. Case report, literature review, and its distinction from low grade osteosarcoma.

    A 42-year old male with the largest reported giant bone island (10.5 cm in length) is presented. Due to its ominous size, association with some degree of pain and increased uptake on radionuclide bone scan, a biopsy was considered necessary definitively to rule out a slow-growing osteosarcoma or blastic metastasis. documentation of growth in adult patients of conventional and giant bone islands, coupled with evidence of increased radionuclide uptake, makes the clinicoradiological distinction between bone islands and blastic malignancies difficult. Guidelines for biopsy versus serial radiographic follow-up of such lesions are addressed.
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ranking = 0.875
keywords = island
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