Osteomyelitis, osteoradionecrosis and MRONJ Flashcards

1
Q

What is osteomyelitis?

A

Infection of bone
Pathological definition - inflammation of bone marrow
Results in necrosis of an area of affected bone and can be suppurative (pus)

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2
Q

What is the aetiology of osteomyelitis?

A

Underlying disorders (DM, EtOH, immunosuppressed)
Peri-implantitis
Infected cyst
Surgical wound
Seeding bacteria from other body sites
Rare cause: syphilis or tuberculosis

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3
Q

What are risk factors for osteomyelitis?

A
  • fibrous dysplasia
  • previous radiation bone exposure
  • osteoporosis
  • Paget’s
  • bone tumours
  • Immunocompromised
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4
Q

What is the mechanism of osteomyelitis?

A

Bacteria (strep/staph) into marrow space - increased vascular collapse and venous stasis - ischaemia - increased pressure and compromised blood supply - necrosis of bone

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5
Q

After necrosis of bone what can happen?

A

1) sequestration (little bits of bone expelled slowly)
2) new bone (involucrum)
3) resorption

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6
Q

Where is the most common site for osteomyelitis to occur?

A

Mandible
Cancellous bone more likely to become ischaemic
Blood supply to mandible less oxygenated than maxilla

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7
Q

What is the microbiology of osteomyelitis?

A
  • Viridans streptococcus
  • Anaerobes (prevotella, fusobacterium, peptostreptococcus)
  • Staph aureus
  • Empirical antibiotic therapy until you get swab results back
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8
Q

Symptoms of osteomyelitis

A
  • deep intense pain
  • high intermittent fever
  • identifiable causative tooth
  • +/- malaise, headache, reduced appetite
  • minimal swelling
  • no flatulae
  • infection usually well localised if treated
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8
Q

Signs of osteomyelitis

A
  • Purudent discharge erodes bone, pus, extensive firm swelling, warm and erythematous.
  • Throbbing jaw pain
  • severse tenderness
    -extrusion of teeth
  • nerve involvement - altered sensation in trigeminal nerve
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9
Q

What are the symptoms of chronic osteomyelitis?

A
  • normal temp
  • symptoms resolve/disappear
  • teeth locally are tender
    Imaging - moth eaten appearance/sequestrum of bone
  • involucrum - new bone appearance
  • risk of path fracture - higher in edentate mandible
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10
Q

What imaging is appropriate for osteomyelitis?

A
  • OPG - little value in acute phase, treat as OM if you suspec
    Chronic - increased radiolucency, moth eaten appearance, islands of bone/sequestra
    CT/MRI - sometimes more useful - increased attenuation in medullary cavity, destruction of cortical bone and proliferation of bony tissue.
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11
Q

What is the tx for osteomyelitis?

A

High dose penicillin sometimes IV
+/- metronidazole
Clindamycin - penetrates avascular tissue but risk of C diff
Surgery
- remove cause
Sequestrectomy - improves blood supply, allow adequate penetration of antibiotics, maximises host defence mechanism.
- hyperbaric oxygen - increase in oxygen helps in angiogenesis and improves osteogenesis and stimulates growth factors.

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12
Q

What are the differences between osteomyelitis and alveolar osteitis?

A
  • OM spreads through bone and is not self limiting
  • OM much more chronic
  • Represents failure of normal defence
    If in doubt biopsy - sockets should have healed by 8 weeks
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13
Q
A
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