Fracture Healing and Avascular Necrosis Flashcards
1
Q
What are the phases of indirect (secondary) bone healing?
A
- Fracture haematoma and inflammation (blood from broken vessels forms a clot, this releases growth factors (TGF-beta) which stimulate inflammatory cells to come to the area of the fracture.
- Fibrocartilage (SOFT) callus – lasts about 3 weeks, new capillaries organise fracture haematoma into granulation tissue, ‘procallus’, fibroblasts and osteogenic cells invade procallus, make collagen fibres which connect ends together and chondrocytes begin to produce fibrocartilage.
- Bony (HARD) callus – after 3 weeks and lasts about 3-4 months where osteoblasts make woven bone.
- Bone remodelling – osteoclasts remodel woven bone into compact bone and trabecular bone.
2
Q
What is direct (primary) bone healing?
A
- Artifical surgical situation
- Involves stabilising fracture so no movement under physiological load
3
Q
Which fractures lead to a compromised blood supply to bone?
A
- Proximal pole of scaphoid fractures
- Talar neck fractures
- Intrascapular hip fractures
- Surgical neck of humerus fractures
4
Q
What is avascular necrosis/osteonecrosis?
A
- Bone infarction near a joint
5
Q
What is the pathophysiology of avascular necrosis/osteonecrosis?
A
- Oedema, haemorrhage, fibrilloreticulosis and hypocellularity may be present in bone marrow lesions
- In AVN, necrosis in medullary bone first
- Overlying cartilage receives nutrition from synovial fluid and remains viable
- Dead bone has empty lucanae surrounded by necrotic adipocytes that often rupture and release fatty acids
- Increased interosseous pressure causes fat to come out leading to focal areas with lack of blood supply
- Fatty acids bind calcium and form insoluble calcium soaps
- During healding process, osteoclasts resorb the necrotic trabeculae
6
Q
How is avascular necrosis/osteonecrosis diagnosed and treated?
A
- X-ray may be normal for months but pathogenic crescent sign (subchondral radiolucency) precedes subchondral collapse
- In late stages loss of sphericity and collapse of the femoral head and joint space narrowing can be seen
- MRI shows increased signal on T2 where oedema is present in bone
- Treat using decompression and joint replacement