Osteochondroses of the bilateral metacarpal heads: Dieterich disease. A case report with review of the literature
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Clinical imaging
Abstract
Osteochondroses is a well-known entity and typically affecting immature skeleton with few common locations involved are femoral head epiphysis, tibial tubercle apophysis, calcaneal apophysis, humeral capitellum and anterior vertebral end plates. We report a rare case of osteochondroses showing avascular necrosis involving metacarpal heads known as Dieterich disease, involving the head of the third metacarpal and probably the first case with a history of rock climbing as an etiology. Chronic repetitive microtrauma plays a significant role in the disease, as is seen in our patient. Imaging plays a crucial role in diagnosing, as well as monitoring progress, with MRI being a critical modality. The fact that this entity is rare does not necessarily make it difficult to detect. It may be clinical underdiagnosed due to lack of familiarity with this entity and radiographic findings may be subtle or inapparent. Bone scan is likely sensitive but not specific. MRI also likely has a role for early detection. This article is written with educational intent for the reader for the benefit of the patients with this rare disease.
First Page
7
Last Page
10
DOI
10.1016/j.clinimag.2020.05.020
Publication Date
11-1-2020
Recommended Citation
Ahuja, Kriti; Gandhi, Darshan; Hernandez-Delima, Fabricio J.; Sharma, Pranav; Gupta, Nishant; and Kier, Ruben, "Osteochondroses of the bilateral metacarpal heads: Dieterich disease. A case report with review of the literature" (2020). All Research. 136.
https://scholar.bridgeporthospital.org/all_research/136
Identifier
32497998 (pubmed); 10.1016/j.clinimag.2020.05.020 (doi); S0899-7071(20)30182-0 (pii)