BONE-05 Flashcards
- osteochondrosis is what?
- multifocal disorder of epiphyseal (growth) cartilage that occurs in both the articular-epiphyseal cartilage complex (immature joint cartilage covering the ends of growing long bones) and the growth plate (physis) in humans and in a variety of animal species.
only occurs during development


(Osteochondrosis)
(Prevalence)
- really common in what?
- what else have it?
- pigs (100% have lesions)
- horses, large dogs, poultry,
others (humans, cattle, sheep, cats)
Osteochondrosis
- studied mainly in what stage in both humans and animals?
- In humans, name of disease varies with site
- In all species, multiple names for the disease
- Osteochondritis dissecans – Osteochondrosis dissecans – Dyschondroplasia
– OCD
don’t memorize these names
- chronic
(Osteochondrosis)
1. among all species in which they have been examined, the early (subclinical) lesions in the articular-epiphyseal carilage comples are what?
2. suggesting what?
1. remarkably similar (as are those in the growth plate)
2. pathophysiology of this condition essentially the same in all species
II. Epiphyseal Cartilage/Normal Endochondral Ossification
- Epiphyseal (growth) cartilage
Vascular hyaline cartilage (growth plate and epiphyseal cartilage portion of the A-E complex)
- Growth plate responsible for what?
- A-E complex responsible for what?
- longitudinal bone growth
- shape of ends of growing long bones
Epiphyseal (growth) cartilage
- destined to do what?
- Composed of four morphologically and biochemically distinct zones
what are they?
- ossify by endochondral ossification, becoming bone in the mature individual
- resting, proliferating, hypertrophic, and calcifying zones
Endochondral ossification
- Orderly maturation of cells in the four zones is required
- Cartilage calcification followed by what?
- Osteoprogenitor cells produce what on calcified cartilage matrix?
- Epiphyseal cartilage must be what for process to occur?

- vascular invasion
- osteoid
- viable
Because epiphyseal cartilage is absent in the adult, the underlying lesions of osteochondrosis can only occur in what?
growing individuals (although clinical signs may not be evident until adulthood)
III. Vascular Supply to Epiphyseal cartilage
- articular cartilage is vascular or avascular?
- Epiphyseal cartilage is supplied by blood vessels within what?
1. avascular
- cartilage canals
(Cartilage Canals)
- Channels containing blood vessels, nerves, and possibly lymphatics
- Arise mainly from what?
- Some arise from what?
- Present at birth, and gradually decrease in number and extent with increasing age and weight
- dissapear completely by when?
- the perichondrium
- subchondral bone
- several months of age
(Cartilage canals)
(chondrification)
- physiological process
- Lumens of cartilage canal vessels fill with what?
- associated with pathological changes in epiphyseal cartilage?
- cartilage
- no
(Cartilage Canals)
- Viability of epiphyseal cartilage highly dependent on what?
- In contrast, adult articular cartilage derives almost all of its nutrition from what?
- blood supply
- synovial fluid (with a minor supply from vessels in subchondral)
III. Morphology of lesions of OC
- In both the articular-epiphyseal complex and the growth plate, lesions of osteochondrosis are composed what?
- focal areas of retained cartilage that are not converted to bone by endochondral ossification
(A-E Complex Lesions)
- Earliest lesion composed of what?
often centered on what?
Are Overlying articular cartilage and subjacent epiphyseal bone affected?
- In more chronic lesions, area of necrosis causes delay in what?
and marked reaction in what?
- focal area of necrotic epiphyseal cartilage
on a necrotic cartilage canal blood vessel
no
- endochondral ossification
- subjacent bone