Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon - Articles Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon Article RSS http://drbrinker.com Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon Article RSS feed. . Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon http://drbrinker.com/tresources/en/images/icons/tendenci34x15.gif Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeonhttp://drbrinker.com no Copyright 2005, Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon Tendenci Membership Management Software by Schipul - The Web Marketing Company en-us noemail@drbrinker.com Tue, 07 Apr 2015 22:29:38 GMT Articles http://drbrinker.com/en/art/121/ Vertebral Aneurysmal Bone Cyst <br> <h2>Orthopaedic Review Vol. XX, NO. 1, January 1991</h2> <h3>Author: M.R. Brinker MD, Thomas S. Whitecloud III, MD, Plas T. James, MD, Michael R. Hand, BS, and Harold M. Antwine III, BA<br> </h3> <p>Click here to read the entire <a target="_blank" href="/attachments/articles/121/Vertebral Aneurysmal Bone Cyst.pdf">published article by Dr Brinker</a></p> <br> <hr /> <div>An aneurysmal bone cyst is a lesion of uncertain etiology that was originally described by Jaffe and Lichtenstein I in 1942. Theories suggest that the tumor is either a vascular disturbance of bone (eg, skeletal hemangioma, arteriovenous malformation) or that it may arise as an abnormal reparative process. Dahlin reported an incidence of 1.4% in 2.000 primary bone tumors. Less than 100 cases of vertebral involvement have been described in the English literature.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div> <h3><strong>CASE REPORT</strong></h3> </div> <div>&nbsp;A 16-rear-old boy presented to Tulane University Hospital (New Orleans) with a complaint of progressive lower back pain. The patient related the onset of pain to an automobile accident that occurred 1 year prior to admission. He described the pain as a dull. poorly localized sensation that had worsened...</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <br><br>15-Sep-91 9:00 AM Vertebral Aneurysmal Bone Cyst Orthopaedic Review Vol. XX, NO. 1, January 1991 Author: M.R. Brinker MD, Thomas S. Whitecloud III, MD, Plas T. James, MD, Michael R. Hand, BS, and Harold M. Antwine III, BA Click here to read the entire published article by Dr Brinker An aneurysmal bone cyst is a lesion of uncertain etiology that was originally described by Jaffe and Lichtenstein I in 1942. Theories suggest that the tumor is either a vascular disturbance of bone (eg, skeletal hemangioma, arteriovenous malformation) or that it may arise as an abnormal reparative process. Dahlin reported an incidence of 1.4% in 2.000 primary bone tumors. Less than 100 cases of vertebral involvement have been described in the English literature. CASE REPORT A 16-rear-old boy presented to Tulane University Hospital (New Orleans) with a complaint of progressive lower back pain. The patient related the onset of pain to an automobile accident that occurred 1 year prior to admission. He described the pain as a dull. poorly localized sensation that had worsened... no http://drbrinker.com/en/art/121/ M.R. Brinker - noemail@drbrinker.com Sun, 15 Sep 1991 14:00:00 GMT