4.3 Article

Clival osteomyelitis resulting from spread of infection through the fossa navicularis magna in a child

Journal

PEDIATRIC RADIOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 9, Pages 995-998

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00247-009-1283-9

Keywords

Clivus; Osteomyelitis; Fossa navicularis magna; Child

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The fossa navicularis is a notch-like bone defect in the basiocciput that has been hitherto considered as an anatomical variant of the clivus and not previously described as a potential source of clival or skull base pathology. We report the imaging findings in a 5-year-old child who presented acutely with a retropharyngeal abscess and osteomyelitis of the clivus. Imaging after treatment revealed a notch-like defect in the anterior clivus consistent with a fossa navicularis. Based on these appearances, we postulate that the lymphoid tissue of the pharyngeal tonsil residing in the fossa navicularis served as a route through which infection spread and subsequently developed into clival osteomyelitis, which is a rare diagnosis. This case is unique, and we believe that the presence of this variant in young children may be important and is not merely an anatomical curiosity.

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