Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders
= OSTEITIS DEFORMANS
[Sir James Paget, 1st. Baronet (18141899), professor of anatomy & surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons at St. Bartholomew Hospital, London]
= multifocal chronic skeletal disease characterized by disordered and exaggerated bone remodeling
Etiology: ? chronic paramyxoviral infection
Prevalence: 3% of individuals >40 years; 10% of persons >80 years; higher prevalence in northern latitudes; 2nd most common disease (after osteoporosis) affecting older individuals
Age: Caucasian of Northern European descent >55 years (in 3%); >85 years (in 10%); unusual <40 years; M÷F = 2÷1
Histo: increased resorption + increased bone formation; newly formed bone is abnormally soft with disorganized trabecular pattern (mosaic pattern) causing deformity
- ACTIVE PHASE = OSTEOLYTIC PHASE
= intense osteoclastic activity = aggressive bone resorption with lytic lesions
Path: replacement of hematopoietic bone marrow by fibrous connective tissue with numerous large vascular channels
- osteoporosis circumscripta of skull
- flame-shaped radiolucency extending from end of long bone into diaphysis
- MIDDLE / MIXED / BLASTIC PHASE (common)
= decreased osteoclastic activity + increased osteoblastic activity
Location: polyostotic in axial skeleton: skull, pelvis, spine
- coexistence of lytic + sclerotic phases
- osseous sclerosis → coarse trabecular + cortical thickening + bone enlargement
- INACTIVE / LATE PHASE = QUIESCENT PHASE
= diminished osteoblastic activity with decreased bone turnover
Path: loss of excessive vascularity
- osteosclerosis + cortical accretion (eg, ivory vertebral body)
- asymptomatic (⅕¾)
- fatigue; enlarged hat size; peripheral nerve compression
- neurologic disorders from compression of brainstem (basilar invagination)
- hearing loss, blindness, facial palsy ← narrowing of neural foramina (rare)
- pain from
- primary disease process rare
- pathologic fracture
- malignant transformation
- degenerative joint disease / rheumatic disorder aggravated by skeletal deformity
- local hyperthermia of overlying skin
- high-output congestive heart failure from markedly increased perfusion (rare)
- increased alkaline phosphatase ← increased bone formation
- hydroxyproline increased ← increased bone resorption
- normal serum calcium + phosphorus
Sites: usually polyostotic + asymmetric; pelvis (75%) >lumbar spine >thoracic spine >proximal femur >calvarium >scapula >distal femur >proximal tibia >proximal humerus
Sensitivity: scintigraphy + radiography (60%) scintigraphy only (2794%) radiography only (1374%)
- osseous expansion
- trabecular coarsening
- cortical thickening
- cystlike areas (fat-filled marrow cavity / blood-filled sinusoids / liquefactive degeneration + necrosis of proliferating fibrous tissue)
- Skull (involvement in 2965%)
- inner + outer table involved
- diploic widening
- osteoporosis circumscripta = well-defined lysis, most commonly in calvarium anteriorly, occasionally in long bones (destructive active stage)
- cotton wool appearance = mixed lytic + blastic pattern of thickened calvarium (late stage)
- basilar impression with encroachment on foramen magnum
- deossification + sclerosis in maxilla
- sclerosis of base of skull
- Long bones (almost invariable at end of bone; rarely in diaphysis)
- candle flame / blade of grass lysis = advancing tip of V-shaped lytic defect in diaphysis of long bone originating in subarticular site (CHARACTERISTIC)
- lateral curvature of femur, anterior curvature of tibia (commonly resulting in fracture)
- Ribs (involvement in 14%)
- Small / flat bones
- bubbly destruction + periosteal successive layering
- Pelvis
- thickened trabeculae in sacrum, ilium; rarefaction in central portion of ilium
- thickening of iliopectineal line
- acetabular protrusion (DDx: metastatic disease not deforming) + secondary degenerative joint disease
- Spine (upper cervical, low dorsal, midlumbar)
- expansion of vertebra
- lytic / coarse trabeculations at periphery of bone
- picture-frame vertebra = bone-within-bone appearance = enlarged square vertebral body with reinforced peripheral trabeculae + central osteopenia, typically in lumbar spine
- ivory vertebra = blastic vertebra with increased density
- isolated posterior arch involvement
- ossification of spinal ligaments, paravertebral soft tissue, disk spaces
Bone scan (94% sensitive):
- usually markedly increased uptake (symptomatic lesions strikingly positive ← increased blood flow + osteoblastic activity)
- normal scan in some sclerotic burned-out lesions
- marginal uptake in lytic lesions
- enlargement + deformity of bones
Bone marrow scan:
- sulfur colloid bone marrow uptake is decreased ← marrow replacement by cellular fibrovascular tissue
MR:
Indications: imaging of complications (spinal stenosis, basilar impression, sarcoma staging)
- areas of decreased SI within marrow on T1WI + increased intensity on T2WI (= fibrovascular tissue resembling granulation tissue)
- hypointense area / area of signal void on T1WI + T2WI (cortical thickening, coarse trabeculation)
- reduction in size + SI of medullary cavity (= replacement of high-SI fatty marrow by ↑ medullary bone formation)
- focal areas of higher SI than fatty marrow (= cystlike fat-filled marrow spaces)
- widening of bone
Cx:
- Associated neoplasia (0.7120%)
- sarcomatous transformation into osteosarcoma (2290%), fibrosarcoma / malignant fibrous histiocytoma (2951%), chondrosarcoma (115%)
- osteolysis in pelvis, femur, humerus
Prognosis:<10% 5-year survival - multicentric giant cell tumor (310%)
- lytic expansile lesion in skull, facial bones
- lymphoma, plasma cell myeloma
- Insufficiency fracture
- banana fracture = tiny horizontal cortical infractions on convex surfaces of lower extremity long bones (lateral bowing of femur, anterior bowing of tibia)
- compression fracture of vertebra (soft bone despite increased density)
- Neurologic entrapment
- basilar impression with obstructive hydrocephalus + brainstem compression + syringomyelia
- spinal stenosis with extradural spinal block (osseous expansion / osteosarcoma / vertebral retropulsion ← compression fracture)
- Early-onset osteoarthritis
Pathogenesis: altered biomechanics across affected articulations
Cx: sarcomatous degeneration: most commonly osteo- / chondrosarcoma / malignant fibrous histiocytoma
Rx: calcitonin, biphosphonates, mithramycin
Detection of recurrence:
- in ⅓ detected by bone scan
- in ⅓ detected by biomarkers (alkaline phosphatase, urine hydroxyproline)
- in ⅓ by bone scan + biomarkers simultaneously
- diffuse (most common) / focal increase in tracer uptake
- extension of uptake beyond boundaries of initial lesion
DDx: osteosclerotic metastasis, osteolytic metastasis, Hodgkin disease, vertebral hemangioma