Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders
= DISH = FORESTIER DISEASE = ANKYLOSING HYPEROSTOSIS
= common ossifying diathesis characterized by bone proliferation at sites of tendinous + ligamentous attachment (enthesis)
Etiology:
- may be caused by altered vitamin A metabolism (elevated plasma levels of unbound retinol)
- long-term ingestion of retinoid derivatives for treatment of acne (eg, Accutane®); ? hypertrophic variant of spondylosis deformans
Age:>50 years; M÷F = 3÷1
- pain, tenderness in extraspinal locations
- restricted motion of vertebral column
- hyperglycemia; positive HLA-B27 in 34%
- increased incidence of hyperostosis frontalis interna
- Spine
Location: middle + lower thoracic >lower cervical >entire lumbar spine
- flowing ossification of at least 4 contiguous vertebral bodies:
- osteophytes located anteriorly + laterally on right side (not on left because of aortic pulsations)
- osteophytes largest at level of intervertebral disk
- radiolucency beneath deposited bone
- disk spaces well preserved, no apophyseal ankylosis, no sacroiliitis
- Pelvis
- bridge across superior aspect of symphysis pubis
- ossification of iliolumbar + sacrotuberous + sacroiliac ligaments (high probability for presence of spinal DISH, DDx: fluorosis)
- whiskering at iliac crest, ischial tuberosity, trochanters
- broad osteophytes at lateral acetabular edge, inferior portions of sacroiliac joints
- Extremities
- big heel spurs (on plantar + posterior surface of calcaneus)
- spur of olecranon process of ulna
- spur on anterior surface of patella
- ossification of coracoclavicular ligament, patellar ligament, tibial tuberosity, interosseous membranes
Cx: postoperative heterotopic bone formation (hip)
DDx:
- Fluorosis (increased skeletal density)
- Acromegaly (posterior scalloping, skull features)
- Hypoparathyroidism
- X-linked hypophosphatemic vitamin Dresistant rickets
- Ankylosing spondylitis (squaring of vertebral bodies, coarser syndesmophytes, sacroiliitis, apophyseal alteration)
- Intervertebral osteochondrosis (vacuum phenomenon, vertebral body marginal sclerosis, decreased intervertebral disk height)