1. Xanthoma combining osteonecrosis in knee joint: a case report.
- Author
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Su H, Gong Y, Chen L, Zhou H, Huang H, Yu S, Wang C, Tong P, and Xu T
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Range of Motion, Articular, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Knee Joint surgery, Knee Joint diagnostic imaging, Osteonecrosis surgery, Osteonecrosis diagnostic imaging, Osteonecrosis complications, Osteonecrosis etiology, Xanthomatosis surgery, Xanthomatosis complications, Xanthomatosis diagnosis, Arthroscopy
- Abstract
Xanthoma typically occurs in the subcutaneous tissues, with rare cases of xanthoma in the joints. However, the case of knee joint osteonecrosis combined with xanthoma is even more uncommon. In this article, we described a 50-year-old female patient who suffered xanthoma in the knee joint on the basis of osteonecrosis of the knee joint. The primary clinical symptoms were knee joint pain and limited mobility. The patient initially received conventional treatment for osteonecrosis. However, there was no significant improvement. Later, we found a synovial xanthoma in the patient's knee. Finally, she underwent arthroscopic excision of the knee joint synovial xanthoma. Following the procedure, her VAS score decreased from 7 to 2, and knee joint mobility increased from 10-103° to 10-140°. Through our follow-up, the patient did not exhibit symptom recurrence. This case is valuable as it provides a feasible therapeutic approach for future clinical applications., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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