CASE 16159 Published on 10.11.2018

Acute Calcific Tendinitis of the Longus Colli Muscle

Section

Head & neck imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

A. A. Montes Tome, M. D. M. Velasco Casares, M. Diez Blanco, M. Oñate Miranda, S. Rizzo, G. C. Fernández-Pérez

Hospital Universitario Río Hortega. Calle Dulzaina, 2, 47012 Valladolid, Spain; Email:arnoldmontes@hotmail.com
Patient

44 years, female

Categories
Area of Interest Head and neck ; Imaging Technique Conventional radiography, MR, CT
Clinical History
A 44 year-old woman presented with a 4-day history of acute posterior cervical pain. She reported severe pain that exacerbates when turning the head or when swallowing. Boddy temperature was 37.2 ° C, acute phase proteins were elevated. She presented with neck stiffness, no palpable lymphadenopathy.
Imaging Findings
Lateral view of the cervical radiography showed prevertebral soft-tissue swelling from C1 to C6 . Focal calcification was noted inferior to the C1 arch (Figure 1). Computed tomography of the neck showed a calcific density (Figure 2b-d) at the superior tendons of the longus colli at the C1- C2 level. A retropharyngeal soft-tissue fluid collection extended from C1-C6 (Figure 2a, c, d).
Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated diffuse retropharyngeal contrast enhancement without evidence of wall enhancement, high SI on T2w images, and no diffusion restriction (Figure 3, 4).
Discussion
Background:
Calcific tendinitis of the longus colli muscles is an inflammation or acute granulomatous response to the deposit of hydroxyapatite crystals, which clinically can be confused with other more serious pathologies, such as a retropharyngea abscess. [1, 2, 3, 4].

Clinical Perspective:
Symptoms are acute and nonspecific and the patient may present with dysphagia, odynophagia, cervical pain, fever and elevation of acute phase reactants. It occurs more frequently in middle-aged (20-50 years of age) patients with a slight female predilection.[2, 3, 4].

Imaging Perspective:
Computed tomography is the imaging modality of choice for the diagnosis of retropharyngeal tendinitis, since it can detect both prevertebral edema and calcium deposition in longus colli tendons with high sensitivity; in contrast, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is very sensitive for prevertebral edema and fluid effusion but the sensitivity for calcium is moderate.
In our patient, subtle calcification and retropharyngeal soft tissue swelling was found on plain x-ray. However, in some cases the amorphous calcific deposit may only be detected with CT and the only finding on radiography may be soft tissue swelling. CT with IV contrast can readily detect small amount of calcium anterior to the body of C2, oedema in the retropharyngeal space and exclude abscess formation (no ring-like enhancement). MRI findings are similar with high SI on T2-w and low SI on T1-w iages, whereas large calcifications have very low SI on all sequences, without evidence of peripheral enhancement or restriction in diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) [5]. In addition, soft tissue edema is seen in the surrounding structures. A liquid collection with marked surrounding enhancement and restriction in DWI should favour the diagnosis of retropharyngeal abscess. [2, 3, 4, 5]. The differentiation of these two entities is important for the treatment decision. Other differential diagnoses are: retropharyngeal space edema due to jugular vein thrombosis or following radiotherapy; perivertebral space infection, which is associated with vertebral body endplate erosions and presents with a median raphe within the fluids and flattened configuration[1, 2, 3, 4].

The treatment is conservative with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory to relieve the symptoms and usually resolves in 1 or 2 weeks.[3, 4, 5].

Written informed patient consent for publication has been obtained
Differential Diagnosis List
Acute Calcific Tendinitis of the Longus Colli Muscle
Retropharyngeal Space Edema
Retropharyngeal Space Abscess
Perivertebral Space Infection
Traumatic injury
Final Diagnosis
Acute Calcific Tendinitis of the Longus Colli Muscle
Case information
URL: https://eurorad.org/case/16159
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.16159
ISSN: 1563-4086
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