Note in these set of images that the patient presents osteochondromas across several bones of his body.
- Both femurs have osteochondromas. Note that they are not symmetrical, whereas the right one protrudes from its medial aspect and grows medially and superiorly; the other, on the left femur, arises and directs itself posterior and superiorly.
- The tibias' exostosis are sessile. Both of the tibias present with osteochondromas on their proximal diaphysis, but only the right one has an osteochondroma emerging from its distal diaphysis.
- And, quite discrete, there is a small osteochondroma at the medial surface of the right fibular distal diaphysis.
- The hip's alterations are more subtle than the ones just described above. First of all, pay attention to the slight different femurs' heads and necks morphology. Then, notice how much more horizontal both the proximal femoral physis are, which might be an early sign in the immature skeletal.
- There is a pedunculated osteochondroma protruding itself from the outer surface of the patient's left scapula.
- Finally, regarding the forearms, notice that only the right one is affected. There is an exostosis protruding from the ulnar middle diaphysis, and another one arising from the radius distal diaphysis.