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Developmental Bone Disorders

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... with many patients dying before 20 years of age Cleidocranial Dysplasia Uncommon ... stabilizes with skeletal maturation Fibrous Dysplasia 25-50% of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Developmental Bone Disorders


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Developmental Bone Disorders
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Traumatic (Simple) Bone Cyst
  • Idiopathic condition seen in 1st and 2nd decade
  • Questionable relation to trauma
  • Male predilection posterior mandible
  • Well-circumscribed radiolucency with scalloping
    between roots

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Traumatic Bone Cyst
  • At surgical exploration, an empty cavity is found
    within the bone
  • Difficult to obtain lesional tissue
  • Fragments of bone lined by chronically inflamed
    granulation tissue

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Traumatic Bone Cyst
  • Empirically, the recommendation has been to enter
    the lesion, establish the diagnosis, then induce
    bleeding
  • Supposedly the hemorrhage organizes and the
    lesion heals

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Stafne Cyst
  • Lingual mandibular salivary gland depression
  • Asymptomatic, discovered on routine panoramic
    radiograph
  • Adult males well-demarcated radiolucency below
    the mandibular canal, posterior mandible
  • CT scan helps confirm the diagnosis

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Osteoporotic Bone Marrow Defect
  • Asymptomatic ill-defined radiolucency in body of
    mandible at old extraction site
  • Middle-aged female
  • May resemble metastatic disease biopsy is
    sometimes necessary
  • Fatty and hematopoietic marrow seen
    microscopically

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Idiopathic Osteosclerosis
  • Asymptomatic lesion discovered on routine
    radiographs
  • Very radiopaque, no expansion
  • Premolar - molar region most common
  • Margins may be sharp or blend with adjacent bone
  • Dense viable bone microscopically

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Cherubism
  • Autosomal dominant condition?
  • Detected in childhood
  • Painless, bilateral expansion of jaws, especially
    the mandible
  • Results in chubby cheeks, suggestive of cherubs
    depicted in Renaissance etchings

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Cherubism
  • Radiographically, presents as bilateral
    multilocular radiolucencies of posterior mandible
  • Less frequently, maxillary involvement
  • Often significant displacement of teeth

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Cherubism
  • Edematous, cellular fibrous connective tissue
  • Relatively sparse, benign-appearing
    multinucleated giant cells
  • Sometimes see perivascular hyalinization

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Cherubism
  • Optimal treatment has not been determined
  • Surgical intervention has been known to
    accelerate the growth of some lesions
  • Many cases seem to involute during puberty

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Osteogenesis Imperfecta
  • Several rare disorders of bone characterized by
    defective collagen, which results in abnormal
    bone mineralization
  • Bones are very fragile, but the degree of
    fragility varies with the type of OI
  • Some are autosomal dominant, others are recessive

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Osteogenesis Imperfecta
  • In severe forms, death may result from passage
    through the birth canal
  • Blue sclera and dentinogenesis imperfecta may be
    seen as components of OI
  • Minimize factors that cause fractures
  • Prognosis depends on type of OI and expression of
    the gene

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Osteopetrosis
  • Rare inherited bone disease caused by lack of
    osteoclastic activity
  • Marrow spaces are filled in by dense bone,
    resulting in loss of hematopoietic precursor
    cells, leading to pancytopenia
  • Blindness, fractures and osteomyelitis are common
    in the autosomal recessive form

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Osteopetrosis
  • Radiographs show diffuse density of the skeleton
  • Thickening of bones of the skull seen on CT
    imaging

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Osteopetrosis
  • Treatment consists of transfusions and
    antibiotics when necessary
  • Bone marrow transplant has had limited success
  • Prognosis is poor for AR form, with many patients
    dying before 20 years of age

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Cleidocranial Dysplasia
  • Uncommon autosomal dominant condition
  • Affects skull, jaws and clavicles primarily
  • Prominent forehead, hypoplastic midface
  • Primary dentition is retained because permanent
    teeth do not erupt
  • Numerous impacted permanent and supernumerary
    teeth

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Cleidocranial Dysplasia
  • Treatment today consists of combined surgical and
    orthodontic care to correct skeletal relations,
    remove supernumerary teeth and bring permanent
    teeth into proper relation
  • Prognosis is good - life span of these patients
    is essentially normal

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Osteitis Deformans
  • Also known as Pagets disease of bone
  • abnormal resorption and deposition, resulting in
    distortion and weakening of bone
  • Unknown etiology
  • Older patients rare lt40 years of age
  • 21 male predilection

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Osteitis Deformans
  • Symptoms vary, but bone pain may be present
  • Most cases are polyostotic
  • Affected bones become thickened and weak
  • With involvement of femurs, simian stance
    develops due to bowing of legs

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Osteitis Deformans
  • Jaws are involved in 10-15 of affected patients
  • Affects maxilla more than mandible
  • Cotton-wool appearance radiographically
  • Often extensive hypercementosis of teeth

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Osteitis Deformans
  • Markedly elevated serum alkaline phosphatase
  • Irregular trabeculae with resting and reversal
    lines - mosaic pattern
  • Rimmed by osteoclasts and osteoblasts
  • Marrow is replaced by vascular fibrous connective
    tissue

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Osteitis Deformans
  • Chronic and progressive, but usually not
    life-threatening
  • No good therapy
  • Patients should be monitored for the development
    of giant cell tumor of bone as well as malignant
    bone tumors, especially osteosarcoma

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • Developmental, tumor-like lesion
  • Recent work suggests a post-zygotic mutation of a
    tumor suppressor gene
  • Usually presents in the first or second decade
  • No sex predilection

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • 80-85 are monostotic (affecting one bone)
  • Painless swelling, slow growth
  • Jaws are among the most commonly affected bones
  • Maxilla is affected more often than mandible

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • Craniofacial fibrous dysplasia represents a
    more severe presentation
  • Maxillary lesions may involve the adjacent facial
    bones, including the sphenoid, zygoma and occiput
  • Results in marked facial deformity

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • Classic radiographic description ground glass
    pattern
  • Poorly defined, blending margins
  • Early stages radiolucent or mottled
  • With maxillary involvement, obliteration of
    maxillary sinus is common

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • Irregularly shaped trabeculae of immature (woven)
    bone
  • Abnormal bone fuses to adjacent normal bone no
    capsule
  • Moderately cellular intertrabecular connective
    tissue

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • Two presentations of polyostotic fibrous
    dysplasia
  • Jaffe type two or more bones affected, in
    conjunction with café-au-lait spots that have
    jagged borders (like the coast of Maine)

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • The second form of polyostotic fibrous dysplasia
    is the McCune-Albright type
  • These patients have two or more bones affected by
    fibrous dysplasia, in addition to café-au-lait
    pigmentation and endocrine disturbances manifest
    as precocious puberty

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Fibrous Dysplasia - Tx
  • Small lesions may not need treatment, or may be
    removed by en bloc resection
  • Significant cosmetic or functional deformity may
    require an attempt at surgical reduction
  • Sometimes the disease stabilizes with skeletal
    maturation

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Fibrous Dysplasia
  • 25-50 of surgically treated lesions show
    regrowth, particularly in younger patients
  • Malignant transformation to a mesenchymal
    malignancy is rare and usually is reported in
    lesions that have received radiation therapy

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Hyperparathyroidism
  • Inappropriate secretion of parathormone
  • Primary - due to parathyroid hyperplasia,
    parathyroid adenoma, parathyroid carcinoma
  • Secondary - due to renal failure, which is
    responsible for poor calcium retention and
    altered vitamin D metabolism

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Hyperparathyroidism
  • Radiographically, loss of lamina dura and
    ground-glass trabecular pattern
  • Unilocular or multilocular radiolucencies may
    develop - brown tumor
  • Enlargement of jaws may develop in long-standing
    renal failure - renal osteodystrophy

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Hyperparathyroidism
  • Histopathologically, brown tumors show vascular
    granulation tissue with extravasated erythrocytes
    and numerous benign multinucleated giant cells
  • Microscopically identical to central giant cell
    granuloma

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Renal Osteodystrophy
  • Unusual hyperplastic response of the bone in
    patients with poorly controlled secondary
    hyperparathyroidism
  • Seen as prominent jaw enlargement in some cases

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Hyperparathyroidism
  • Treatment remove the source of the hormone
    secretion if primary
  • If secondary, better control of serum calcium.
    Parathyroidectomy may be necessary. Renal
    transplant is another alternative.
  • Prognosis Fair

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Cemento-Osseous Dysplasias
  • Benign, possibly reactive, process that may
    originate from the periodontal ligament
    fibroblast
  • Most commonly seen in African-American females,
    but can affect either sex and any ethnic group

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Cemento-Osseous Dysplasias
  • Occurs in a spectrum of severity
  • Periapical cemental dysplasia (mild)
  • Focal cemento-osseous dysplasia (moderate)
  • Florid cemento-osseous dysplasia (severe)

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Periapical Cemental Dysplasia
  • Usually detected on routine radiographic
    examination
  • Mandibular anterior region, middle-aged
    African-American women
  • Initially, radiolucencies at apices of teeth,
    with gradual central opacity developing

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Periapical Cemental Dysplasia
  • Diagnosis based on clinical and radiographic
    features
  • Treatment none necessary
  • Prognosis excellent

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Focal Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • Probably confused with a true neoplasm, the
    central cemento-ossifying fibroma, in the past
  • FCOD is much more common than CCOF, but they are
    seen in a similar demographic group younger
    adult women
  • Also seen more commonly in African-American women

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Focal Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • Usually detected on routine radiographic
    examination
  • Body of mandible female predilection
  • Most common in the 20-40 year age range
  • Unilocular radiolucency, with or without
    radiopaque central component
  • Swelling or discomfort is unusual

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Focal Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • At surgery, the lesion is usually poorly defined
    from the surrounding bone, and multiple small,
    gritty fragments are obtained
  • Connective tissue with embedded mineralized
    tissue that resembles either woven bone or
    cellular cementum
  • Ginger root shape of the trabeculae

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Focal Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • Treatment may be unnecessary, however biopsy is
    often warranted in order to rule out other
    disease processes
  • Prognosis is generally regarded as good, although
    a lesion that initially appears as a focal
    process may in fact represent the first sign of
    florid cemento-osseous dysplasia

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Florid Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • Most severe expression of the cemento-osseous
    dysplasias
  • Middle-aged or older African-American women
  • Affects multiple quadrants of the jaws
  • Generally asymptomatic, unless overlying mucosa
    ulcerates, resulting in sequestration

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Florid Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • Radiolucencies with multiple cotton-wool
    radiopacities in at least two quadrants of the
    jaws
  • Lesions become more radiodense with time
  • May be associated with traumatic bone cysts

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Florid Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • Generally a biopsy is not necessary because of
    the typical clinical presentation
  • Submission of the sequestrating fragments shows
    densely mineralized tissue with necrotic debris
    and inflammation

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Florid Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia
  • For the asymptomatic patient, careful follow-up
    is recommended, with attempts to maintain the
    dentition
  • Difficulty arises when secondary infection
    results in sequestration, requiring debridement
    and antibiotics
  • Malignant transformation?
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