“…Normal radiography is seen in the condition, with magnetic resonance imaging being the most sensitive modality, indicating the pathognomonic findings of frond-like synovial proliferation with signal intensity similar to that of subcutaneous adipose tissue on all sequences and joint effusion. 4 These characteristic features help to exclude other intraarticular synovial lesions such as rheumatoid arthritis, focal synovial lipoma, pigmented villonodular synovitis, synovial chondromatosis and synovial haemangioma (Table 1). 1,3,5 Anatomically, the bicipital bursa lies between the biceps tendon and radial cortex, with the superficial and deep radial nerve as nearby structures, making these susceptible to compression when the bursa is inflamed and distended.…”