Bone lesions and infections - MSK Flashcards
1
Q
Multiple Myeloma (marrrow)
A
- Most common (20 million /yr), 50-70 yo, any bone – classic xray is in skull
- Typical lytic “punched out” lesions of multiple myeloma
2
Q
Osteosarcoma
A
Teens, (2-3 cases per million people per yr), around knee, also hip and shoulder
3
Q
Ewings Sarcoma
A
- 5-20 yo, LE, pelvis, upper arm, ribs
- Large, expansile lytic lesion of distal femoral metaphysis w/wide zone of transition and cortical destruction and associated soft tissue mass
- TX: Chemo + surgery, radiation or both, limb salvage (artificial joints and bone), used to do amputation
4
Q
Chondrosarcoma
A
40-70 yo, hip/pelvis, should
5
Q
Osteoid Osteoma
A
- Benign bone lesion
- Small, makes bone
- Night pain (keeps them awake) relieved by aspirin
- Ages 10-20
- Tibia/femur
- Surgery or heat ablation
6
Q
Enchondroma
A
- Cartilage lesion
- Asymptomatic unless fx
- Any age
- Most common hand tumor
- Conservative mgmt
- Benign bone lesion
7
Q
Fibrous Cortical Defect (smaller lesion) /Non-ossifying fibroma (big/larger)
A
- Benign bone lesion
- Most common benign bone tumor in kids
- Shafts of long bones
- Disappear after adolescence
- Usually asymptomatic
- Follow w/ x-rays
8
Q
Unicameral Bone Cyst
A
- Primarily children
- Cause unknown, perhaps growth plate/circulation abnormality
- Proximal humerus/femur
- May fracture
- Treatment with aspiration and steroid or matrix injection
- Benign bone lesion
9
Q
Aneurysmal Bone Cyst
A
- Long bones and spine
- Usually < 20 yo
- Swelling and pain
- Vague injury hx
- Currettage/graft/resection
- 30% recurrence
- Benign bone lesion
10
Q
Osteomyelitis
A
- Children – hematogenous (Originating in or spread by the blood), highly vascular metaphysis
- Adults - trauma (open fx or post op)
- Presentation: Fever, pain, swelling, drainage if open fx
- CBC, ESR, CRP, CT or MRI
- Aspiration or biopsy – definitive dx
- Organisms: Kids - S. aureus, gr A strep, Adults - S. aureus, Pseudomonas (stepping on nail)
- Treatment: Difficult, Long course parenteral or local abx, Surgical debridement
11
Q
Septic Arthritis
A
- Direct inoculation, hematogenous spread, extension from osteomyelitis
- S. aureus, Pseudomonas (IV drug use), TB & fungal (immigrant), N. gonorrhea (sexually active)
- Joint pain (knee pain often means something wrong with hip), limited ROM, redness and warmth
- Fever, tachycardia, decreased appetite possible
- Immune compromized pts don’t mount good inflammatory response!
- Can have infected joint without a typical presentation (not super hot/swelling/inflammatory response)
- CBC, ESR, CRP
- Joint fluid aspiration for crystals, gram stain, culture, cell count – r/o gout or pseudogout
- Joint fluid WBC > 50,000/mm3, low glucose, high protein
- Blood culture, lyme titer as indicated
- X-rays
- Immediate empiric IV Abx – want to cover staph auerus etc
- Surgical joint lavage
- Always refer to orthopedics if worried about septic arthritis
- Abscess in joint that will destroy joint and tissues