Pathology - MSK Flashcards

1
Q

How are fractures classified

A

complete/incomplete
simple/compound (open)
comminuted
displaced/undisplaced
stress
pathological

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2
Q

Describe the steps in fracture healing

A

1) immediate rupture of blood vessels, haematoma fills the gaps and provides a fibrin mesh
2) influx of inflammatory cells and fibroblasts
3) procallus forms within 1 week, characterised by organisation of the haematoma, no rigidity yet
4) bony callus forms after 2 weeks, characterised by woven bone oriented perpendicular to cortical axis
5) remodelling occurs at 6 weeks, characterised by woven bone becoming lamellar bone

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3
Q

What factors impede fracture healing

A

inadequate immobilisation
marked displacement
vascular compromise
infection
systemic factors (nutrition)

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4
Q

How does remodelling of callus occur

A

-woven bone is initially orientated perpendicular to cortical axis
-remodelling occurs along lines of weight bearing, converting woven bone to lamellar bone

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5
Q

What are the causes of osteomyelitis

A

-most common = staph aureus
-IVDU = e coli, klebsiella, pseudomonas
-sickle cell = salmonella

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6
Q

What is the pathogenesis of osteomyelitis

A

-infection of bone/marrow due to haematogenous spread, extension from local infection or trauma
-bacteria proliferate and induce a neutrophil inflammatory reaction
-entrapped bone undergoes necrosis, dead bone is called sequestrum
-bacteria lift off the periosteum, leading to rupture and abscess formation
-involucrum develops, with new bone encasing an inflammatory focus

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7
Q

What are the outcomes of osteomyelitis

A

resolution
development of chronic infection (pathological fracture, acute flare up, severe sepsis)

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8
Q

What are the causes of osteoarthritis

A

risks include age, inflammation, genetics, mechanical stress, joint injury
-primary OA = no obvious initiating cause
-secondary OA = systemic disease (diabetes), mechanical stress (obesity), congenital deformity, previous trauma

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9
Q

Pathogenesis of osteoarthritis

A

3 phases
1) chondrocyte injury = due to genetic and environmental factors
2) early = chondrocytes proliferate and secrete inflammatory mediators/collagen/proteoglycan, causing remodelling
3) late = repetitive injury and inflammation causes chondrocyte drop out and loss of cartilage

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10
Q

Morphology and clinical features of osteoarthritis

A

morphology:
joint mice, subchondral cyst, bone eburnation, subchondral sclerosis, heberden/bouchard nodes

clinical:
-slowly progressing disease, deep aching pain, worse with use, morning stiffness, crepitus, limited ROM
-knees and hands worse in women, hips in men

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11
Q

What are the causes of rheumatoid arthritis

A

chronic systemic inflammatory disease, mainly attacks joints, autoimmune - type 4 hypersensitivity

pathogenesis: triggered by exposure of genetically susceptible host to arthritogenic antigen
leads to loss of self tolerance and immune response (CD4+ T helper cells, IL-1, macrophages)

risks: EBV, genetics (HLA-DRB1 genes)

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12
Q

Morphology of rheumatoid arthritis

A

symmetric arthritis, mostly small joints of hands and feet, inflammatory infiltration of joints
-pannus = proliferative synovium with inflammatory cells, fibroblasts, granulation tissue
-fibrosing ankylosis = pannus forms a bridge between opposing bones that eventually ossifies (boney ankylosis)

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13
Q

Extra-articular manifestations and long term complications of RhA

A

extra-articular manifestations: rheumatoid nodules (elbows/forearm/lumbosacral), vasculitis, fibrinoid necrosis

long term complications: systemic amyloidosis, opportunistic infections, joint destruction, renal failure

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14
Q

What organisms cause septic arthritis, what are pre-disposing conditions

A

organisms:
gonococcus, staphylococcus, streptococcus, h influenzae, salmonella

predisposition:
immunosuppression, joint trauma, surgery, chronic arthritis, IVDU

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15
Q

Name 2 different species of staphylococcus and give examples of infections they cause

A

-staph aureus = skin (impetigo), pneumonia, osteomyelitis, TSS, endocarditis in IVDU
-staph epidermidis = endocarditis in prosthetic valves
-staph saprophyticus = UTI

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16
Q

What are the causes of gout

A

hyperuricaemia (needed but not sufficient to cause gout)
-primary gout = idiopathic, overproduction (diet), reduced excretion
-secondary gout = leukaemia, tumour lysis, inborn errors of metabolism, chronic renal disease

risk factors: alcohol, obesity, drugs (thiazides), toxins (lead), age, genetics

17
Q

Pathogenesis of gout

A

-uric acid is end product of purine catabolism and is filtered from circulation by glomerulus
-hyperuricaemia due to uric acid overproduction of reduced renal excretion
-precipitation of monosodium urate crystals in joints
-crystals phagocytosed by macrophages leading to an inflammatory reaction

18
Q

Morphology of gout

A

-acute arthritis = crystallisation of urates within or around the joint
-chronic arthritis = with repeat attacks, leads to tophi
-tophi = pathognomonic mass of crystals surrounded by inflammatory cells, occur in ear, olecranon, patella bursae
-nephropathy = deposition of urate crystals in kidney and formation of uric acid stones