Chondroblastoma: A Rare Cause of Femoral Neck Fracture in a Teenager
Michael D. Paloski, DO, Michael J. Griesser, MD, Mark E. Jacobson, MD, and Thomas J. Scharschmidt, MD
Chondroblastomas usually present in the epiphyseal region of bones in skeletally immature patients. These uncommon, benign tumors are usually treated with curettage and use of a bone-void filler.
Here we report a case of a hip fracture secondary to an underlying chondroblastoma in a 19-year-old woman. Open biopsy with intraoperative frozen section pointed toward a diagnosis of chondroblastoma. Extended curettage was performed, followed by cryotherapy with a liquid nitrogen gun and filling of the defect with calcium phosphate bone substitute. The femoral neck fracture was stabilized with a sliding hip screw construct. The patient progressed well and continued to regain functional status. A final pathology report confirmed the lesion to be a chondroblastoma.
Clinicians should have heightened awareness of a pathologic lesion in a young person presenting with a femoral neck fracture and should consider the uncommon differential diagnosis that the lesion is located in the greater trochanter apophysis.