Emergency Radiology

, 15:427 | Cite as

Calcific discitis in children: vertebral body involvement (possible insight into etiology)

  • Leonard E. Swischuk
  • Michael Jubang
  • Siddharth P. Jadhav
Original Article

Abstract

The aim of the study was to present our cases of calcific discitis, analyze the imaging findings, and review the literature in an attempt to formulate a possible etiology. We reviewed the imaging and clinical findings in nine patients with calcific discitis and accomplished a literature review of the condition. There were nine patients, five males and four females. Age range was 5–13 years with a mean of 9.7 years. Twenty-three discs were involved, nine cervical and fourteen thoracic. Four cervical discs were not calcified but merely swollen. One patient presented with abnormal magnetic resonance (MR) signal changes within a vertebral body. Our literature search revealed another such patient and brought up the possibility that the insult to the disc might be secondary to vertebral body involvement and disruption of the tenuous vascular/nutritional support of the intervertebral disc from the adjacent vertebral body. In the early stages of calcific discitis, only swelling and expansion of the disc are seen. More recently, with MR imaging, vertebral body involvement has been demonstrated to also occur. As a result, it may be that the initial insult (vascular compromise) is to the vertebral body (nutritional support for the disc) rather than to the disc.

Keywords

Discitis Calcific Children 

References

  1. 1.
    Swischuk LE, Stansberry SD (1991) Calcific discitis: MRI changes in disks without visible calcification. Pediatr Radiol 21:365–366, doi: 10.1007/BF02011490 PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
  2. 2.
    Sonnabend DH, Taylor TK, Chapman GK (1982) Intervertebral disc calcification syndromes in children. J Bone Jt Surg Br 64(1):25–31Google Scholar
  3. 3.
    Girodias JB, Azouz EM, Marton D (1991) Intervertebral disk space calcification: a report of 51 children with a review of the literature. Pediatr Radiol 21(8):541–546, doi: 10.1007/BF02012591 PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
  4. 4.
    Klekamp JW, Green NE, Arildson RC (1997) Paravertebral inflammation mistaken for neoplasm or abscess by MRI. J South Orthop Assoc 6:81–87PubMedGoogle Scholar
  5. 5.
    Furukawa K, Hoshino R, Hasue M, Kuramochi E (1997) Cervical intervertebral-disc calcification in a child: case report with seven-year follow-up. J Bone Jt Surg Am 59(5):692–693Google Scholar
  6. 6.
    Cronqvist S, Mortensson W (1975) Protrusion of calcified cervical discs into the spinal canal in children. A report of two cases. Neuroradiology 9(4):223–225 doi: 10.1007/BF00346152 PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
  7. 7.
    Heinrich SD, Zembo MM, King AG (1991) Calcific cervical intervertebral disk herniation in children. Spine 16:228–231PubMedGoogle Scholar
  8. 8.
    McGregor JC, Butler P (1986) Disc calcification in childhood: computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging appearances. Br J Radiol 59:180–182PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
  9. 9.
    Herring JA, Hensinger RN (1988) Instructional case cervical disc calcification. J Pediatr Orthop 8:613–616PubMedGoogle Scholar
  10. 10.
    Rabinowitz JF, Wolf BS, Greenberg El, Rausen AR (1965) Osseous changes in rubella embryopathy1 (Congenital Rubella Syndrome). Radiology 85:494–499PubMedGoogle Scholar
  11. 11.
    Reed GB Jr (1969) Rubella bone lesions. J Pediatr 74:208–213, doi: 10.1016/S0022-3476(69)80068–5 PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
  12. 12.
    Oda J, Tanaka H, Tsuzuki N (1988) Intervertebral disc changes with aging of human cervical vertebra. Spine 13(11):1205–1211, doi: 10.1097/00007632-198811000-00001 PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
  13. 13.
    Chandraraj S, Briggs CA, Opeskin K (1988) Disc herniations in the young and end-plate vascularity. Clin Anat 11:171–176 doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-2353(1998)11:3<171::AID-CA4>3.0.CO;2-W CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  14. 14.
    Swischuk LE (1991) Calcific discitis: MRI changes in disc without visible calcification. Pediatr Radiol 21:365–366PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar

Copyright information

© Am Soc Emergency Radiol 2008

Authors and Affiliations

  • Leonard E. Swischuk
    • 1
  • Michael Jubang
    • 1
  • Siddharth P. Jadhav
    • 1
  1. 1.UTMBGalvestonUSA

Personalised recommendations