CASE 14296 Published on 08.06.2017

Unilateral condylar hyperplasia

Section

Musculoskeletal system

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Allan Wang, MD, Angel Donato, MD, Darko Pucar, MD, PhD

Augusta University Health,
Medical College of Georgia,
Augusta University;
1120 15th Street,
BA-1411 30912 Augusta, USA,
Email:dpucar@augusta.edu
Patient

23 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Head and neck, Nuclear medicine ; Imaging Technique CT, SPECT-CT
Clinical History
20-year-old male patient presented with progressively slurred and altered speech despite 5 years of speech therapy. He has had progressively worsening dental occlusion with crossbite, midline shifting and negative overjet which has required multiple corrective orthodontic procedures. Clinical history is negative for CVA, malignancy, arthralgias, weakness or muscle pain.
Imaging Findings
CT shows enlargement of the right condylar process with elongation of the condylar neck; normal cortical thickness and trabecular pattern. (Fig. 1 and 2)
Radionuclide bone imaging - 10% or greater absorption of the affected condyle relative to the ipsilateral side (normal subjects can have up to a 5% difference). (Fig. 2)
Discussion
Unilateral condylar hyperplasia (UCH) is a disease of nonneoplastic overgrowth of the unilateral mandibular condyle about the contralateral condyle [1]. UCH cause facial asymmetry by deviation of the mandible toward the normal side and altered dental occlusion. [2].
The aetiology of UCH is not well understood. Histopathologic evaluation of condylar cartilage in patients with UCH reveals a prominent proliferative zone with hyperplasia of undifferentiated mesenchymal cells and hyaline chondrocytes.
UCH can be classified in hemimandibular elongation, hemimandibular hyperplasia and a combination of these two (hybrid form) [3]. UCH can present in either an active or a stationary phase based on the growth state.

In cases of continued condylar growth causing progressive deformity, UCH treatment includes condylectomy as the preferred technique for treating active condylar hyperplasia. Disc repositioning and orthognathic surgery especially for a bilateral condylar hyperplasia. And high condylectomy, disc replacement, and orthognathic surgery together. [4]
UCH during the stationary phase can be treated with osteotomy. However, a pitfall in this scenario is performing osteotomies in the setting of continued condylar activity, as this may lead to further asymmetry and necessitate subsequent correction. The timeline of condylar growth in cases of UCH is variable, and thus SPECT/CT studies are important in directing surgical management.
UCH is typically diagnosed clinically. On X-ray and CT, UCH can present as a combination of enlargement of the condylar process with elongation of the condylar neck with normal cortical thickness and trabecular pattern.
Radionuclide bone imaging has a unique advantage in evaluating the ongoing activity of condyle. It is an important quantitative tool for evaluating osteoblastic activity and thus in this application allows the evaluation of condylar metabolism. Increased radionuclide uptake in the affected condylar is constituted evidence of continued abnormal growth. Wen et al. demonstrated that on 99Tc-MDP (technetium methylene diphosphonate) SPECT of UCH patients, the relative percentage uptake on the affected condyle was 59% significantly higher than the 41% uptake on the contralateral condyle. [1]
Differential Diagnosis List
Unilateral condylar hyperplasia of the right mandibular condyle
Osteochondroma
Temporomandibular joint osteoma
Post-traumatic or post-infectious growth
Final Diagnosis
Unilateral condylar hyperplasia of the right mandibular condyle
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/14296
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.14296
ISSN: 1563-4086
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