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Involucrum refers to the layer of new bone formed by the periosteum around a sequestrum (dead bone) in the setting of chronic osteomyelitis.
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Often perforated by a cloaca, allowing drainage of pus or formation of sinus tracts.
| Process Step | Description |
|---|---|
| Infection | Bacterial osteomyelitis causes inflammation and marrow necrosis |
| Sequestrum formation | Devitalized necrotic bone becomes isolated from vascular supply |
| Periosteal reaction | The periosteum lays down new bone in response to cortical destruction |
| Involucrum | This new bone sheath surrounds and encases the sequestrum |
| Modality | Imaging features |
|---|---|
| XR | • Involucrum: Thick, irregular periosteal new bone encasing the original cortex |
| • Sequestrum: Inside Dense fragment within a lucent cavity | |
| • Cloaca: Linear channel from inside to outside (if sinus present) | |
| CT | • Bony detail: Clearly shows cortical disruption, involucrum, and sequestrum |
| • Sinus tract mapping: Excellent for evaluating cloaca and surgical planning | |
| MR | • Involucrum: Seen as low signal intensity rim on all sequences |
| • Sequestrum inside: Non-enhancing T1/T2 dark fragment | |
| • Adjacent findings: Marrow edema, soft tissue abscess, sinus tracts |