Rice body mass formation mimicking a neoplastic disease around the trochanteric bursae of the hip.

Multiple rice body formation is an uncommon inflammatory process. Sometimes it leads to a big mass in unusual locations. Although sometimes associated with bursitis and systemic diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, the pathophysiology of this rare entity is still obscure. We present a 29-year-old woman with multiple rice body mass formation in the trochanteric bursa of the left hip. She was operated, and had no recurrence at 18 months after the surgery.

[1]  O. Aydin,et al.  Multiple rice body formation accompanying the chronic nonspecific tenosynovitis of flexor tendons of the wrist , 2008, Radiation Medicine.

[2]  N. Otsuka,et al.  Case report: biceps tenosynovial rice bodies. , 2006, Journal of pediatric orthopedics. Part B.

[3]  M. Melachrinou,et al.  Rice-Body Formation and Tenosynovitis of the Wrist: A Case Report , 2006, Journal of orthopaedic surgery.

[4]  C. Tan,et al.  MRI appearances of multiple rice body formation in chronic subacromial and subdeltoid bursitis, in association with synovial chondromatosis. , 2004, Clinical radiology.

[5]  A. Omeroglu,et al.  Multiple rice body formation in the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa and knee joint , 2004, Skeletal Radiology.

[6]  J. Griffith,et al.  Rice-body formation in atypical mycobacterial tenosynovitis and bursitis: findings on sonography and MR imaging. , 2003, AJR. American journal of roentgenology.

[7]  R. Kim,et al.  Tuberculous subdeltoid bursitis with rice bodies. , 2002, Yonsei medical journal.

[8]  B. Chen,et al.  Distinguishing multiple rice body formation in chronic subacromial-subdeltoid bursitis from synovial chondromatosis , 2002, Skeletal Radiology.

[9]  S. Eustace,et al.  Rice body formation in bicipito-radial bursitis: ultrasound, CT, and MRI findings , 1998, Skeletal Radiology.

[10]  D. Scott,et al.  Frequency of occurrence, mode of development, and significance or rice bodies in rheumatoid joints. , 1982, Annals of the rheumatic diseases.