The imaging features of benign osseous lesions of the bone are often c
haracteristic and suggestive of a specific diagnosis. This is particul
arly true for skeletal benign bone-forming lesions such as enostosis,
osteoma, osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma. Enostosis or bone island i
s an incidental finding in the axial skeleton (pelvis, spine, ribs) of
asymptomatic patients. it appears as a small (0.2-2 cm) round to oval
sclerotic area with irregular, radiating ('thorny') spicules peripher
ally. Osteoma is a benign slow-growth tumor and usually an incidental
finding in cranial sinuses, vault and mandible, and presenting as a ho
mogeneous, sharply defined bone mass arising from bone surface; its si
gns and symptoms are rare and depend on the tumor size and location-e.
g. sinusitis, headache, exophthalmos, diplopia. Osteoid osteoma is a p
ainful highly vascularized benign tumor usually affecting the long bon
e diaphysis cortex of young patients; it generally appears as a small
radiolucent nidus with or without central calcification and surroundin
g bone sclerosis on radiographs, and as a 'hot' spot on scintigraphy.
CT is the method of choice for the definite location of the nidus espe
cially in sites of complex anatomy, such as the spine, pelvis and hind
foot. Osteoblastoma is a rare tumor, histologically similar to osteoid
osteoma but with a significantly different clinical potential because
of the possibilities of postoperative recurrence, of its locally aggr
essive behavior or, rarer still, malignant transformation; the spine a
nd long bones are affected in more than half the cases. Its radiologic
appearance is not always distinctive and usually characterized by a l
ytic lesion with varying bone production and expansile behavior; CT an
d MRI are required for the diagnosis of spinal osteoblastomas. When a
bone-producing tumor or tumor-like lesion is suspected but no specific
diagnosis can be made, the knowledge of the range of the imaging find
ings of these lesions will allow a suitably ordered differential diagn
osis. Radiography is the single most effective imaging method in this
respect. CT is required for the tumors in complex anatomical sites, su
ch as the spine, pelvis and hindfoot, as well as for the optimal asses
sment of the tumor matrix. MRI is specifically required to study the l
esion effect on the spinal canal (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd
. All rights reserved.