Chronic Nonbacterial Osteomyelitis of the Jaw in a 3-Year-Old Girl.
Shigeru MakinoHideo OshigeJun ShinozukaShinsaku ImashukuPublished in: Pediatric reports (2023)
Differential diagnosis of bacterial osteomyelitis (BOM) and chronic nonbacterial osteomyelitis (CNO) is challenging. Pediatric CNO can be diagnosed at around 10 years of age and when CNO cases involve only the jaw, it is difficult to make a diagnosis in a young child. A 3-year-old female developed CNO at the jaw alone. She presented with no fever, right jaw pain, mild trismus, and a preauricular facial swelling around the right mandible. Computed tomography (CT) revealed a hyperostotic right mandible, with osteolytic and sclerotic changes associated with periosteal reaction. At first, we suspected BOM and antibiotics were administered. Subsequently, CNO was diagnosed, and the patient received flurbiprofen (a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAIDs)). Lack of a sufficient response led to successful treatment with a combination of oral alendronate and flurbiprofen. Physicians should be aware of CNO, a rare autoinflammatory noninfectious bone disease of unknown etiology, even in young children, although the disease mostly affects older children and adolescents.
Keyphrases
- computed tomography
- anti inflammatory
- primary care
- chronic pain
- magnetic resonance imaging
- middle aged
- soft tissue
- mental health
- dual energy
- single cell
- physical activity
- image quality
- contrast enhanced
- drug induced
- emergency department
- bone mineral density
- community dwelling
- body composition
- anti inflammatory drugs
- bone loss
- young adults
- postoperative pain