Musculoskeletal, Skin, and Connective Tissue- Phatology Flashcards

1
Q

Achondroplasia

A

Failure of longitudinal bone growth (endochondral ossification) Ž short limbs.

Constitutive activation of FGFR3 actually inhibits chondrocyte proliferation. > 85% of mutations occur
sporadicall.

Associated with increased paternal age. Most common cause of dwarfism.

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2
Q

Osteoporosis

  • Definition
  • Diagnosis
A

bone lose mass despite normal bone mineralization and lab values.

Diagnosed by bone mineral density measurement by DEXA at the lumbar spine, total hip, and femoral neck, with a T-score of ≤ −2.5 or by a fragility fracture at hip or vertebra.

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3
Q

Osteoporosis

  • Occurs in
  • Treatment
A

Most commonly due to bone resorption related to low estrogen levels and old age.

Treatment: bisphosphonates, teriparatide, SERMs, rarely calcitonin; denosumab (monoclonal antibody against RANKL).

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4
Q

vertebral compression fractures (in osteoporosis)

A

acute back pain, loss of height, kyphosis. Also can present with fractures of femoral neck, distal radius (Colles fracture).

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5
Q

Osteopetrosis

  • Definition
  • Etiology
  • Imagen
A

Defective osteoclasts Ž thickened, dense bones that arecprone to fracture.

Mutations (eg, carbonic anhydrase II) impair ability of osteoclast to generate acidic environment. Fills marrow space Ž pancytopenia, extramedulla ry hematopoiesis

X-rays show diffuse symmetric sclerosis (bone-in-bone, “stone bone”). Bone marrow transplant is curative.

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6
Q

Osteomalacia/rickets

- Etiology

A

Defective mineralization of osteoid (osteomalacia) or cartilaginous growth plates (rickets). Most commonly due to vitamin D deficiency. Increase ALP

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7
Q

Osteomalacia/rickets

  • Imagen
  • Clinical presentation
A

X-rays show osteopenia and “Looser zones” (pseudofractures) in osteomalacia, epiphyseal widening and metaphyseal cupping/fraying in rickets.

Children with rickets have pathologic bow legs (genu varum), bead-like costochondral junctions (rachitic rosary), craniotabes (soft skull).

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8
Q

Paget disease of bone (osteitis deformans)

- Physiophatology

A

Increase osteoclastic activity followed by increase osteoblastic activity that forms poor-quality bone. Mosaic pattern of woven and lamellar bone; long bone chalk-stick fractures.

High blood flow from High arteriovenous shunts may cause high-output heart failure. High risk of osteogenic sarcoma.

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9
Q

Paget disease of bone (osteitis deformans)

  • Clinical presentation
  • Stages
  • Treatment
A

Hat size can be increased due to skull thickening; hearing loss is common due to auditory foramen narrowing.

Stages of Paget disease:
ƒƒ Lytic—osteoclasts
ƒƒMixed—osteoclasts + osteoblasts
ƒƒ Sclerotic—osteoblasts
ƒƒQuiescent—minimal osteoclast/osteoblast activity

Treatment: bisphosphonates.

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10
Q

Osteonecrosis (avascular necrosis)

A

Infarction of bone and marrow, usually very painful. Most common site is femoral head.

“CAST Bent LEGS.”
Corticosteroids, Alcoholism, Sickle cell disease, Trauma, “the Bends” (caisson/ decompression disease), LEgg-Calvé-Perthes disease, Gaucher disease, Slipped capital femoral epiphysis.

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11
Q

Lab values in bone disorders

A

Pag. 451

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12
Q

Osteochondroma

  • Epidemiology
  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Most common benign bone tumor. Males < 25 years old.

Metaphysis of long bones

Lateral bony projection of growth plate covered by cartilaginous cap.

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13
Q

Osteoma

  • Epidemiology
  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Middle age.

Surface of facial bones.

Associated with Gardner syndrome.

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14
Q

Osteoid osteoma

  • Epidemiology
  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Adults < 25 years old. Males > females.

Cortex of long bones.

Presents as bone pain (worse at night) that is relieved by NSAIDs. Bony mass (< 2 cm) with radiolucent osteoid core

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15
Q

Osteoblastoma

  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Vertebrae.

Similar histology to osteoid osteoma. Larger size (> 2 cm), pain unresponsive to NSAIDs.

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16
Q

Chondroma

  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Medulla of small bones of hand and feet.

Benign tumor of cartilage

17
Q

Giant cell tumor

  • Epidemiology
  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

20–40 years old.

Epiphysis of long bones (often in knee region).

Locally aggressive benign tumor. Neoplastic mononuclear cells that express RANKL and reactive
multinucleated giant (osteoclast-like) cells. “Osteoclastoma.” “Soap bubble” appearance on x-ray
18
Q

Osteosarcoma

  • Epidemiology
  • Predisposing factors
A

Accounts for 20% of 1° bone cancers. Peak incidence of 1° tumor in males < 20 years.

Predisposing factors: Paget disease, bone infarcts, radiation, familial retinoblastoma, Li-Fraumeni syndrome.

19
Q

Osteosarcoma

  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Metaphysis of long bones (often in knee region)

Malignant osteoblasts. Presents as painful enlarging mass or pathologic fractures. Codman triangle (from elevation of periosteum) or sunburst pattern on x-ray.

20
Q

Chondrosarcoma

  • Location
  • Characteristics
A

Medulla of pelvis and central skeleton.

Tumor of malignant chondrocytes.

21
Q

Ewing sarcoma

  • Epidemiology
  • Location
A

Most common in Caucasians. Generally boys < 15 years old.

Diaphysis of long bones (especially femur), pelvic flat bones.

22
Q

Ewing sarcoma

- Characteristics

A

Anaplastic small blue cells of neuroectodermal origin (resemble lymphocytes). “Onion skin” periosteal reaction in bone.

Differentiate from conditions with similar morphology (eg, lymphoma, chronic osteomyelitis) by testing for
t(11;22) (fusion protein EWS-FLI1).

Aggressive with early metastases, but responsive to chemotherapy.

  • 11 + 22 = 33 (Patrick Ewing’s jersey number).
23
Q

Osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis

A

Pag 454

24
Q

Gout

  • Definition
  • Physiophatology
  • Crystals
A

Acute inflammatory monoarthritis caused by precipitation of monosodium urate crystals in joints.

Hyperuricemia, which can be caused by:
ƒƒ Underexcretion of uric acid (90% of patients)—largely idiopathic.
ƒƒOverproduction of uric acid (10% of patients)—Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, PRPP excess, cell turnover (eg, tumor lysis syndrome), von Gierke disease

Crystals are needle shaped and ⊝ birefringent under polarized light.

25
Q

Gout

- Clinical findings

A

Asymmetric joint distribution. Joint is swollen, red, and painful. Classic manifestation is painful MTP joint of big toe (podagra)

Acute attack tends to occur after a large meal with foods rich in purines, trauma, surgery, dehydration, diuresis, or alcohol consumption.

26
Q

Gout

- Treatment

A

Acute: NSAIDs (eg, indomethacin), glucocorticoids, colchicine.

Chronic (preventive): xanthine oxidase inhibitors (eg, allopurinol, febuxostat)

27
Q

Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (pseudogout)

  • Etiology
  • Clinical presentation
A

Deposition within the joint space. Occurs in patients > 50 years old. Usually idiopathic, sometimes associated with hemochromatosis, hyperparathyroidism, joint trauma.

Pain and swelling with acute inflammation (pseudogout) and/or chronic degeneration (pseudo-osteoarthritis). Knee most commonly affected joint

28
Q

Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (pseudogout)

  • Findings
  • Treatment
A

Chondrocalcinosis (cartilage calcification) on x-ray. Crystals are rhomboid and weakly ⊕ birefringent under polarized light.

Acute treatment: NSAIDs, colchicine, glucocorticoids.
Prophylaxis: colchicine.