Abstract

Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a benign but rare proliferative disorder of the synovium. It commonly occurs in the adult population and usually presents as a monoarticular disease. There are two types of PVNS, namely the localised and diffused type. The disease is often misdiagnosed due to its rarity especially in paediatric patients. Knee involvement in PVNS is the commonest form in children although other joints such as hip, foot, ankle, hip, sacroiliac joint and concurrent multiple joint involvements have also been reported. PVNS in paediatric patients is often misdiagnosed as septic arthritis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and bone sarcoma, and the diagnosis is usually often made late due to its vague presentation. The majority of PVNS cases are managed by surgery either via open or arthroscopic synovectomy except in a few paediatric patients as described in the literature. This case report of PVNS is of a knee in 11-year-old boy who was initially treated as septic arthritis. The synovium appearance mimicked the features of PVNS during a knee arthrotomy washout, and histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis. The knee symptoms had significantly improved without additional surgery, and good functional knee motion was achieved, with no sign of recurrence, after two years of follow-up.

Highlights

  • Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a benign lesion of the synovial tissues

  • We report a paediatric case of knee PVNS, diagnosed and managed as septic arthritis before it turned out to be a PVNS that recovered well without synovectomy

  • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the knee suggested aggressive lesion, possibly osteomyelitis of the distal femur, with subperiosteal abscess extending to the proximal tibia, as well as confirming the suprapatellar pouch collection with enhanced synovium in the knee, which indicating possible septic arthritis (Fig. 1b)

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Summary

Introduction

Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a benign lesion of the synovial tissues. it has the potential to become locally aggressive and cause significant morbidities.It is rarely considered in paediatric patient until multimodality of radiological investigations and tissue studies proved otherwise. Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a benign lesion of the synovial tissues. It is a benign lesion, the recommended management of PVNS in paediatric age group patients is open or arthroscopic synovectomy[4]. We report a paediatric case of knee PVNS, diagnosed and managed as septic arthritis before it turned out to be a PVNS that recovered well without synovectomy.

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