Many bone lesions have a characteristic roentgen appearance, while
others create diagnostic dilemmas not only for the radiologist, but also
for the pathologist and surgeon. Arteriography is helpful in the
diagnosis of these difficult cases, which cannot be diagnosed with
certainty by the combined data from plain radiographs and histologic
material. Since therapy is depen- dent on the specific diagnosis, and
unnecessary radical surgery has been performed in the past for benign
disease, the addition of arteriographic data may confirm or refute a
diagnosis and be quite helpful to the patient and orthopedic surgeon.
Issa Yaghmai has had a great interest in the angiography of bone lesions
and has collected over 650 cases during the past 10 years. He has
examined patients with virtually every type of bone lesion, and has
faithfully cat- alogued and recorded his findings along with those of
the pathologist. The histologically doubtful cases were sent to other
renowned bone patholo- gists for opinions so that he could be as
accurate as possible in correlating his angiographic findings with
specific histologic diagnoses. His collection of bone arteriograms is
surely one of the most extensive in the world. He has recorded in this
volume the illustrations and information he has amassed, and
supplemented it with pertinent information from an exhaustive review of
the literature. Bone angiography is not for every patient with a bone
lesion, and Issa carefully tells us when it will or will not help us in
our differential diagnosis.