## Correct Answer: A. Fallen fragment sign The **fallen fragment sign** is the pathognomonic radiological finding of a simple (unicameral) bone cyst. This sign appears on anteroposterior (AP) radiographs as a bony fragment that has separated from the cyst wall and fallen inferiorly within the cyst cavity due to gravity, creating a characteristic appearance of a loose bone fragment suspended within a radiolucent lesion. This occurs because the cyst fluid is under pressure, causing the cyst wall to fracture internally, and the separated fragment then settles dependently. The sign is highly specific for simple bone cysts and is rarely seen in other bone lesions. Simple bone cysts are benign, fluid-filled lesions that typically occur in the metaphyseal region of long bones (especially proximal humerus and proximal femur) in children and adolescents. The fallen fragment sign is best visualized on plain radiographs and is considered virtually diagnostic when present. While not all simple bone cysts demonstrate this sign, its presence is absolutely pathognomonic and distinguishes simple bone cysts from other benign bone lesions in the Indian pediatric population. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Never breaches physis** — This is incorrect because simple bone cysts **do not respect the physis**—they can breach and cross the growth plate, particularly in older children and adolescents. While they typically originate in the metaphysis, they may extend across the physis into the epiphysis. This is a common misconception; the defining feature is the fallen fragment sign, not the relationship to the physis. NBE may trap students who memorize incomplete anatomical boundaries. **C. Central radiolucent lesion** — This is wrong because a central radiolucent lesion is a **non-specific finding** present in many benign bone lesions (giant cell tumors, aneurysmal bone cysts, fibrous dysplasia, etc.). While simple bone cysts are indeed radiolucent, this feature alone does not distinguish them from other lesions. The pathognomonic sign requires the specific fallen fragment appearance, not merely radiolucency. This option represents a generic description rather than a diagnostic hallmark. **D. Scalloping of cortex** — This is incorrect because cortical scalloping is a **non-specific finding** seen in multiple benign bone lesions, including fibrous dysplasia, neurofibromatosis, and other metaphyseal lesions. While simple bone cysts may show scalloped margins due to pressure erosion of the cortex, this is neither pathognomonic nor specific to simple bone cysts. NBE uses this distractor because students may confuse pressure-related cortical changes with diagnostic criteria. ## High-Yield Facts - **Fallen fragment sign** is the pathognomonic radiological finding of simple bone cyst—a bony fragment separated from the cyst wall and fallen inferiorly within the cavity. - Simple bone cysts occur in the **metaphyseal region** of long bones, most commonly proximal humerus and proximal femur in children aged 5–15 years. - **Pressure-related complications** include pathological fracture (most common presentation in Indian pediatric orthopedic clinics), which may lead to diagnosis. - Simple bone cysts are **fluid-filled benign lesions** that may resolve spontaneously or require aspiration/injection of corticosteroids or bone marrow as per Indian orthopedic practice guidelines. - The cyst **can breach the physis** and extend into the epiphysis, contrary to older teaching; this does not change the diagnosis. ## Mnemonics **SBC Pathognomonic Sign** **F**allen **F**ragment = **F**luid-filled cyst. The fragment falls due to gravity within the pressurized fluid cavity—unique to simple bone cysts. **Simple Bone Cyst vs. ABC (Aneurysmal Bone Cyst)** SBC = **Single** chamber, **Fallen** fragment, **Metaphyseal**. ABC = **Multiple** septations, **No** fallen fragment, **Eccentric** location. Use this when differentiating on radiographs. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "radiolucent lesion" and "cortical scalloping" as distractors because these are real features of simple bone cysts but are non-specific and present in many other benign bone lesions. The trap is confusing a common feature with a pathognomonic sign—students must recognize that only the fallen fragment sign is diagnostic. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric orthopedic practice, simple bone cysts are often discovered incidentally on radiographs taken for pathological fractures of the proximal humerus or femur. The fallen fragment sign on plain radiographs immediately confirms the diagnosis and guides conservative management (observation, aspiration, or steroid injection) without need for further imaging or biopsy, expediting treatment decisions in resource-limited settings. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Orthopedics section); Robbins Pathological Basis of Disease (Ch. 26, Bone Tumors)_
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