SARCOIDOSIS is a protean disease characterized pathologically by the formation of noncaseating granulomas. While involvement of virtually every tissue and organ has been described, the usual sites are lymph nodes, liver, spleen, lungs, skin, and the uveoparotid region. The exact incidence of bone marrow involvement is not known, but osseous lesions are identified in about 20 per cent of the cases, nearly always limited to the small, long bones of the hands and feet. The discrete, eccentric, lytic lesions in these bones are characteristic and when present are important diagnostic features. Involvement of other bones is distinctly unusual. Only 2 documented examples of vertebral involvement were found in a search of the literature.1, 2 REPORT OF A CASE A 35-year-old female was well until November of 1959, when she developed episodes of severe, stabbing pain in the neck. These episodes lasted up to an hour and recurred several