In
Jaffe [1] described a new bone lesion, which he named osteoid osteoma. This
entity arose in spongy bone and was less than 2 cm in diameter. Jaffe was the
first to identify and describe osteoid osteoma of the spine. In Jaffe [2] and
Lichtenstein [3] independently proposed the term benign osteoblastoma. Osteoid
osteoma and osteoblastoma are bone-producing lesions that are frequently
localized in long bones and posterior elements of the vertebra. The most common
presenting symptom is pain. Osteoblastoma and osteoid osteoma are
histologically similar in many regards. The basic microscopic pattern in
osteoblastoma and osteoid osteoma is bone-forming tumor containing numerous
osteoblasts producing osteoid and woven bone. In comparison to osteoid osteoma,
osteoblastoma has more aggressive characteristics and often forms extra
skeletal bone in the soft tissue. There have been several large series
reporting on osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma of the spine [1,12,13,16,17].
However, the reports included information on patients who did not have surgery
[12,16,17] or numerous patients who were treated before 1960 [1,13]. As several
imaging techniques have been developed during the last 20 years, the diagnosis
in patients can be made earlier in the clinical course and more exact excision
possible.
Pathology
After
the first descriptions of osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma by Jaffe [10,11]
and Lichtenstein [15], these rather vascular, osteoid, and bone-forming tumors
caught the attention of different authors. Jackson [9], published a review of
860 cases of osteoid osteoma and 184 cases of osteoblastoma collected from the
English literature. The spine has been the location of 10% of all osteoid
osteoma [1 4,9,23] and 36% of osteoblastoma. These spine tumors arose in the
posterior elements. Histologically,
osteoid osteoma is small, benign, and self-limited, containing osteoblasts that
produce osteoid and woven bone [12]. Both of these tumor types tend to occur in
the thoracic and lumbar spine [3,21]. Osteoblastoma occur predominantly in
patients younger than 20 years of age [5,10,15]. Clinically, the pain of osteoblastoma
is not as severe at night, nor is it relieved by aspirin, as is pain of osteoid
osteoma.