Osteomyelitis and Osteoradionecrosis Flashcards
How is Osteomyelitis of jaws classified and what is the origin?
- Almost always of local origin and not caused by blood-borne infection
- The classification of osteomyelitis is confusing and not all cases can be easily categorised
- Names are more descriptions of clinical presentations based on chronicity and effects on bone
What are the clinical features of acute osteomyelitis and what are the causes?
- Bacteria and inflammation spread through medullary bone from a focus of infection
Sources of infection:
-PA infection, pericoronitis, fracture through periodontal pocket, ANUG, contamination injuries (open fractures or gunshot wounds)
Clinical features:
- Mandible mainly affected, usually adult males
- Early complaints: severe, throbbing, deep-seated pain and swelling with external swelling due to inflammatory oedema
- Later: distension of periosteum with pus
- Finally: subperiosteal bone formation causes swelling to become firm. The overlying gingiva and muscle is red, swollen and tender
- Associated teeth become tender and may become loose
- Pus may exude from open socket
- Difficulty opening mouth and swallowing
- Regional lymph nodes enlarged
- Sometimes paraesthesia of lower lip
- Minimal systemic upset
What do most pts who suffer from acute osteomyelitis of the jaws have?
Jaws are resistant to osteomyelitis, and most pts have a predisposing condition to osteomyelitis
- Local damage or disease of jaws:
Radiation damage
Causes of osteosclerosis which reduces vascularity (Paget’s disease, Fibro-osseus lesions, osteopetrosis)
- Impaired immune defences Poorly controlled diabetes Sickle cell anaemia Chronic alcoholism Drug taking Tobacco smoking Malignant neoplasms and their treatment NB UNCOMMON IN HIV
What is the radiographic appearance of acute osteomyelitis
- After about 10 days, radiographs show mouth-eaten pattern of bone
- Later shows loss of trabecular patterns and areas of radiolucency indicating bone destruction
- Areas of dead bone appear as relatively dense areas which become more sharply defined as they are progressively separated as sequestra
- Subperiosteal bone formation appears as a thin, curved strip of new bone below the lower border of the jaw in lateral of panoramic radiographs
What is the pathology of acute osteomyelitis
- Suppurative infection with oral bacteria forming a biofilm on sequestra of bone
- Mandible has relatively limited bone supply and dense bone, so Infection actions and acute inflammation cannot escape => pressure spreading infection though the marrow spaces and compresses BVs confined within their vascular canals
- Thrombosis and obstruction then lead to further bone necrosis
- Pus formed by necrotic soft tissue and inflammatory cells is forced along the medulla and eventually penetrates the cortex to reach the subperiosteal region by resorption of bone
- Distention of periosteum by pus stimulates subperiosteal bone formation, but perforation of the periosteum by pus and the formation of sinuses on the skin or oral mucosa is rarely seen
- At the boundary of healthy and infected tissue, osteoclasts resorb the periphery of dead bone which eventually becomes separated as sequestrum
What is the management of acute osteomyelitis
- Usually resolves fully following aggressive treatment
- The key factor is to assess whether the infection is limited to the jaws or may be spreading systemically
- Severely ill or very pale pt with high temp suggest systemic spread
- Essentail measures:
Bacterial sampling and culture
Vigorous antibiotic treatment
Debridement and immobilisation of any fracture
Drainage to relieve pressure
Remove source of infection if possible - Additional tx:
Sequestrectomy
Decortication if necessary
Resection and reconstruction
What are the clinical features of chronic osteomyelitis
- Suppurative infection, but suppuration is generally limited and may cease in quiescent periods
- Much more common than acute osteomyelitis and arises from infection by weakly virulent bacteria or in avascular bone
- Most cases develop without acute phase (rarely acute osteomyelitis develop into chronic - when it does it is usually due to inadequate tx)
Clinical features:
- Mandible mainly affected
- Infection of dental origin
- Low-grade pain (persistent ache or pain, bad taste from pus draining to mouth, may be exposed bone, in more acute phases there is swelling and increased pain)
- Initially the original focus of infection can be identified, but may persist after removal of source of infection and becomes self-perpetuating in the bone
What is the radiographic appearance of chronic osteomyelitis
- Variable
- Patchy or poorly defined radiolucency and sclerosis (sometimes resembling malignant neoplasm)
- Sequestra may be identified
- There may be periosteal new bone later (proliferative periostitis)
What is the pathology of chronic osteomyelitis
- Persistent low-grade infection associated with chronic inflammation, activation of osteoclastic bone destruction and granulation tissue formation
- Healing is frustrated by inability of the inflammation immune response to access bacteria in dead avascular bone and by the slow separation of dead bone as sequestra
- Sequestra will usually separate spontaneously during months or years and may be several cm in length
- If antibiotic tx successful, sequestra may be sterilised and reincarnated into healing bone
- Conversely, infection may spread widely but never develop florid features of acute osteomyelitis
What is the management of chronic osteomyelitis
- Resistent to tx and must be treated aggressively to overcome factors that favour persistence of infection
- Slow response to tx
- Source of infection must be removed
- Prolonged antibiotic tx required
- Role for surgery to remove sequestra, sclerotic and non-vital bone
What are the clinical features of diffuse sclerosing osteomyelitis
- Even lower intensity of infection, without formation of pus in which low-virulence organisms or repeated inadequate antibiotic treatment may lead to longstanding widespread osteomyelitis
- Persistence of infection not obvious and chronic low-dull pain and swelling are not severe enough to suggest osteomyelitis immediately
Clinical features:
- Affects adults and mandible almost exclusively
- Patchy diffuse sclerosis in alveolar process
- Changes are more marked around sites of PA or periodontal chronic inflammation
- Persistent ache or pain but no swelling
- Some cases may be part of SAPHO syndrome
What is the radiographic appearance of diffuse sclerosing osteomyelitis
- Main features are radiographic
- Extensively patchy sclerosis of mandible, poorly localised and without a clear focus of radiolucent infection
- Resembles but is distinct from florid cemento-osseus dysplasia
What is the pathology and treatment of diffuse sclerosing osteomyelitis
Pathology
- Bone sclerosis and remodelling
- Scanty marrow spaces and little or no inflammatory infiltrate, although adjacent to areas of inflammation
Treatment:
- Eliminate source of infection with local measures and antibiotics
What are the clinical features of focal sclerosing osteomyelitis
- In some cases, a focus of osteomyelitis is so small or caused by such low-virulence organisms that the clinical presentation is dominated by the local bone reaction to the infection rather than the infection itself
- Commoner in young because their bone is better vascularised and produces more reactive bone deposition around the infection
- Suppuration and widespread infiltration of marrow spaces by inflammatory cells are ABSENT
- Bony reaction to low-grade PA infection
Clinical features:
- Children and young adults affected
- Premolar or molar region of mandible affected
- Bone sclerosis associated with non-vital or pulpitic tooth
- Localised by uniform radiodentisty related to tooth with widened PDL space or PA area
- No expansion of jaw
What is the pathology and treatment of focal scleroising osteomyelitis
Pathology
- Dense sclerotic bone with scanty connective tissue or inflammatory cells
Treatment
- Elimination of source of inflammation by xla or endo