Bone Growth & Repair Flashcards

1
Q

Briefly describe the structure of cortical vs cancellous bone?

A

Cortical has circular concentric lamellae called osteons around haversian’s canals

Cancellous has trabeculae and marrow

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2
Q

Which type of bone resists what type of force, and in which one is longitudinal growth done?

A

Cortical bone resists bending & torsion

Cancellous bone resists compression, this is where the physis is

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3
Q

What are the 4 stages of fracture repair?

A

Inflammation
Soft Callus
Hard Callus
Bone Remodelling

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4
Q

What occurs during the inflammatory phase?

A

1) Fibroblasts chuff on in
2) Angiogenesis (induced by macrophages)
3) Mesenchymal & Osteoprogenitor cells appear

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5
Q

What can we give to accelerate the inflammatory phase?

A

Platelet concentrates & Growth factors e.g. IGF, VEGF, PDGF & TGF-B

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6
Q

What happens during the soft callus stage?

A

Swelling subsides and cartilage/fibrous tissue unites the bony fragments

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7
Q

What can we do during the soft callus stage?

A

Gold Standard is an Autogenous Cancellous Bone Graft

This is both osteoconductive & inductive

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8
Q

What are the disadvantages should we use allograft bone in the soft callus stage?

A

Not osteoinductive

Risk of disease transmission

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9
Q

What occurs during the hard callus stage?

A

Cartilage is converted to Woven bone

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10
Q

What occurs in the remodelling stage?

A

Woven bone converted to lamellar bone & the medullary canal is reconstituted

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11
Q

What could cause Delayed Union of a fracture?

A
  • High energy injury
  • Instability
  • Infection
  • Steroids & immunosuppressants
  • Smoking
  • Warfarin
  • NSAIDs
  • Ciprofloxacin
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12
Q

What can you do when a bone fracture fails/delays healing?

A

A different fixation
Dynamisation
Bone Grafting

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