Term
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Definition
Pluripotential stem cell, gives rise to osteoblasts |
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Term
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Definition
Synthesize matrix and initiate bone mineralization and growth |
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Term
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Definition
Encased by bone
Control Calcium and Phosphorous levels
Respond to mechanical forces |
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Term
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Definition
Bone resorbtion cells
Break down matrix stimulate bone renewal |
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Term
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Definition
- Produced by osteoblasts
- Woven bone: Fetal skeleton and growth plates
- Formed quickly
- Replaced by lamellar bone
- Woven bone is deposited on the surface of preexisting lamellar bone (bottom)
- Soft bone, tends to fracture
- Layered pattern: lamellar bone
- Strong replacement of woven bone
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Term
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Definition
Formation of a growing, enlarging skeleton |
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Term
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Definition
Breakdown and renewal of mature bone for skeletal maintenance |
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Term
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Definition
Preformed cartilaginous model |
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Term
Intramembranous formation |
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Definition
Bone laid directly on fibrous layer of mesenchyme |
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Term
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Definition
- Increased porosity due to loss of bone mass
- Usually refers to senile and postmenopausal forms with thinning of bone predisposing to fracture, especially femoral necks, wrists, and vertebrae
- Pathogenesis: Aging, decreased estrogen levels, slowing osteoblasic activity, and increased osteoclastic activity
- Current interest is in prevention and bone densitometry
- Menopause Osteoporosis Pathogenesis:
- Decreased serum estrogen
- Increased IL-1, IL-6, TNF
- Incrased expression of RANK and RANKL
- Increased osteoclast activity
- Aging Osteoporosis Pathogenesis:
- Decreased replicative activity of osteoprogenitor cells
- Decreased synthetic activity of osteoblasts
- Decreased biologic activity of matrix-bound growth factors
- Reduced physical activity
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Term
Osteoporotic Vertebral Body |
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Definition
Compression fractures lead to shortening of the body compared to normal with characteristic loss of horizontal bone and thickening of vertical bone. |
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Term
Secondary Osteoporosis Causes |
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Definition
- Endocrine
- Neoplastic
- GI
- Malnutrition
- Malabsorption
- Drugs
- Miscellaneous
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Term
Paget Disease of the bone
Osteitis Deformans |
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Definition
- Causes are uncertain
- Initially osteoclasts and then osteoblasts are affected leading to disordered bone formation (mosaic pattern)
- Mosaic pattern: Tile like pattern, likened to a jigsaw puzzle is a histologic hallmark of Pagets disease and is pathonomonic
- Bone is soft, porous, lack stability, and is vunerable to fracture
- A paramyxovirus has been implicated but not proven
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Term
Osteonecrosis
Avascular Necrosis |
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Definition
- Infarction of bone and marrow, due to vascular abnormality
- Steroid induced necrosis is most common and may be due to vascular compression
- Morphology: Geographic pale area of marrow secondary to bone cell necrosis, softening may lead to collapse of cartilage into underlying bone
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Term
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Definition
- Bacteria transported to bone by blood or direct extension from a nearby infected site.
- Staph aureus MC
- Sickle cell predisposes to Salmonella infection of bone
- TB: Lung and GI
- Syphilis: Congenital or acquired with formation of gummas (infectious granulomas) in bone
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Term
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Definition
- MC matrix producing primary bone tumor
- Bimodal distribution: Age < 20 yrs or elderly
- Elderly usually have additional risk factors like Pagets disease, infarcts, or radiation therapy
- Also Hereditary form which is rare
- Associated with Rb gene and p53 mutation
- Areas of rapid growth that often present with pain swelling or fracture.
- MC: Knee
- Growth through medullary canal, through cortex to lif periosteum to form a triangle on X-ray called Codman Triangle
- Gross Appearance:
- Bulky, gritty, gray-white tumors
- May be primary, secondary, solitary, or multicentric
- MC: Primary, solitary, intramedullary and poorly differentiated
- Formation of bone is most characteristic histologic feature
- Aggressice, hematogenos spread
- Mets: Lungs, bones, brain, and elsewhere
- Treatment: Chemotherapy, limb-salvage surgery, mets assumed
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Term
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Definition
- Second most common matrix producing bone tumor
- Age: > 40 yrs
- Favors central skeleton: pelvis, shoulder, ribs
- Causes pain
- Classified by site of origin (radiographic) and histology
- > 10 cm tumors are more aggressive
- Mets: lungs, and other parts of skeleton
- Grossly is looks bulky, translucent bluish gray glistening tumors
- May be intramedullary or juxtacortical
- X-ray: prominent endosteal scalloping with flocculent densities
- Looks like a snow storm with lots of white flecks
- Histologic Hallmark is production of malignant cartilage
- Usually low grade but may be high grade (grade 3) or areas of de-differentiation to high grade sarcoma may occur
- Treatment is wide surgical excision for low grade tumors
- Chemotherapy is added for tumors with areas of de-differentiation or mesenchymal components
- Survival Rate:
- Grade 1: 90%
- Grade 2: 81%
- Grade 3: 43%
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Term
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Definition
- Sarcomas producing fibroblastic collagen
- Usually occurs in middle aged and elderly
- Usually arise de novo but can be associated with pre-existing bone tumors, bone infarcts, Paget Disease or previous irradiation pf bone
- Enlarging painful masses, usually metaphases of long bones and pelvic flat bones
- X-ray: permeative, lytic, with soft tissue extension causing pathologic fracture
- Fibrosarcoma differentiation determined by amounts of collagen produced and degree of cytologic atypia
- Herringbone storiform pattern on histology
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Term
Ewing Sarcoma (EWS)
Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumor (PNET)
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Definition
- Tumors of neural phenotype
- Share a common chromosome fusion gene: (EWS FL11) as a part of a (11; 22) (q24;q12) translocation
- EWS histology: small round blue cells
- Must be distinguished from leukemia/lymphoma
- PNET: histologic feature or neural differentiation
- Histological distinction has no clinical significance
- Second in frequency to osteosarcoma as most common primary malignany bone sarcomas in children
- Presents in youngest age group: 1-15 yrs
- Clinical Presentation:
- Painful enlarging mass of the diaphysis of long tubular bones, especially femur and flat bones of the pelvis
- Lytic tumor with permeative margins that extends into surrounding soft tissue
- Characteristic periosteal reaction deposited in an onion-skin fashion
- Systemic inflammatory response may mimic infection: pathologic exam important
- Treatment: surgery, chemotherapy, irradiation
- 5 year survival rate: 75%
- > 50% have long term cures
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Term
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Definition
- Most common form of skeletal malignancy
- Any malignancy may be the primary
- Children: neuroblastoma, Wilms tumor, osteosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, rhabdomysarcoma
- Adults: Prostate Cancer, Breast, kidney, and lung
- Deposits may be multifocal or solitary involving any bone
- X-ray: blastic, lytic, or mixed lesions
- Lytic lesions are due to cell products rather than cells themselves
- Most commonly purely osteoblastic metastasis of bone: Prostate CA
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Term
In class question:
What type of anemia is associated with carcinoma metastic to bone? |
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Definition
Myelophthistic with leukoerythroblastosis peripheral blood picture |
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Term
In class question:
A 65 yr old female falls and fractures her wrist. What condition is likely to be the single most important factor contributing to the fracture? |
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Definition
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Term
Soft Tissue Tumors Definition |
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Definition
- Mesenchymal Proliferations arise from stem cells capable of mesenchymal differentiation
- Tumors are classified based on the tissue they resemble
- Tumors located outside bone, blood vessels, viscera, brain and lymphoreticular system, mucosal linings, skin
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Term
Pathogenesis of Soft Tissue Tumors |
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Definition
- Arise from mutated mesenchymal stem cells found throughout the body
- Mustated cells have new fusion genes
- Classified for tissues the resemble, NO evidence that they are derived from these tissues
- Some tumors have no known normal tissue counterpart, so classification is different from others studied in this course
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Term
Risk Factors of Soft Tissue Tumors |
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Definition
- Cause is often unknown
- Environmental Factors
- Radiation
- Chemical and thermal burns
- Trauma
- Herbicides
- Immunosupression
- Immunologic alterations
- Genetic syndromes (minority)
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Term
Epidemiology of Soft Tissue Tumors |
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Definition
- Locations
- 40% lower extremity
- 30% trunk and retroperitoneum
- 20% upper extremity
- 10% head and neck
- 1.4 male to 1 female
- 15% in children
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Term
Features of Soft Tissue Tumors |
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Definition
- Accurate histologic typing for prognosis
- Grading of sarcomas (I-III)- reflects mitotic activity, necorsis, and differentiation
- Size, depth, stage, location determine prognosi
- Extremities have a better prognosis than retroperitoneal
- Superficial tumors have better prognosis
- Metastasize to lug, bone
- Usually do NOT involve lymph nodes
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Term
Architectural Patterns of Soft Tissue Tumors |
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Definition
- Smooth Muscle: Fascicles of eosinophilic spindle cells intersecting at right anles
- Fibrohistocytic: Short fascicles of spindle cells radiating from a central point (like spokes on a wheel) storiform
- Schwann Cell: Nuclei arranged in columns-palisading
- Fibrosarcoma: Herringbone
- Synovial sarcoma: Mixture of fascicles of spindle cells and groups of epithelioid cells-biphasic
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Term
Morphology of Cells in Soft Tissue Tumors |
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Definition
- Spindle Cells
- Rod-shaped, long axis twice as great as short axis
- Tumor Types
- Fibrous
- Fibrohistiocytic
- Smooth Muscle
- Schwann Cell
- Small Round Cells
- Size of a lymphocyte with a little cytoplasm
- Tumor Types
- Rhabdomyosarcoma
- Prmitive neuroectodermal tumor
- Epithelioid Cells
- Polyhedral cells wih abundant cytoplasm, nucleus is centrally located
- Tumor Types
- Smooth muscle
- Schwann cell endothelial
- Epithelioid Sarcoma
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Term
Soft Tissue Tumor Prognosis |
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Definition
- Accurate histologic diagnosis is crucial
- Make sure it is not lymphoma, or metastatic carcinoma
- Immunohistochemistry or confirm lineage
- High grade/High Stage = Poor outcome
- Superficial better than deep
- Extremities better than retroperitoneum
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Term
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Definition
- Fat cell lineage
- Most common adult soft tissue tumor
- Varients with fibrosis, vessels, spindle cells, pleomorphic cells, and marrow elements (myelolipoma)
- Usually encapsulated with mature fat cells
- Soft, mobile, and painless
- Cured by excision
- Benign
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Term
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Definition
- Common adult sarcoma in >40 (40-60) yr age group
- DOES NOT OCCUR IN YOUNG PEOPLE
- Fat cell lineage
- Arise as large tumors in deep tissues of proximal extremities and retroperitoneum
- May be well differentiated, myxoid, round cell, or pleomorphic
- Myxoid and round cells are on a spectrum
- Possess lipoblasts
- Vary from indolent (well differentiated) to aggressive with vascular metastases
- Recur locally unless adequately excised
- Can have necrotic areas, hemorrhagic areas
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Term
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Definition
- Fibrocytes cell lineage
- Non-neoplastic lesion usuall due to trauma (physical or ischemic)
- Plump reactive fibroblasts or primitive mesenchymal cells
- Develop suddenly and grow rapidly
- Mimic sarcomas with hypercellularity, mitoses, and primitive cells (history imperative)
- Include nodular fascitis and myositis ossificans
- Nodular Fasclitis
- Trauma 15-20%
- Rapidly growing painful tumors of adults
- Volar apect of forearm, chest, and back
- Cellular, mitotically active plump immature fibroblasts
- Needs to be distinguished from other adult sarcomas: fibrosarcoma
- Myositis Ossificans
- Trauma 50%
- MC: Young athletic
- Has metaplastic bone after 3 weeks
- Symptoms depend on stage
- Early: swollen and painful
- Late: Painless, hard, well-demarcated mass, may mimic sarcoma
- Fibroblastic proliferation with metaplastic bone
- Eventually tumor may turn completely to bone with a bone marrow space
- Cured by excision
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Term
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Definition
- Tumors of myofibroblasts
- Superficial Types:
- Dupuytren Contracture- Palmar variant
- Plantar Varient
- Peyronie disease- penile variant
- All more frequent in males
- Cause contractions and masses
- May recur after excision
- Deep Types
- Desmoid Tumors
- Extra-abdominal and intra-abdominal types
- Involve muscles in trunk and proximal extremities, abdominal wall, mesentery and pelvic walls
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Term
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Definition
- Rare
- Can occur anywhere including th retroperitoneum, thigh, knee, and distal extremities
- Unencapsulated
- Infiltrative
- Soft fish-flesh masses with hemorrhagic and necrosis
- Spindle cells in herringbone fashion to high cellular and pleomorphic with mitoses
- Aggressive-recurring in more than 50% and metastasizing in more than 25%
- Herringbone pattern on histology
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Term
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Definition
- Tumor is from the facultatice fibroblast: makes collagen (fibro) and resembles phagocytic cells (histiocytic)
- The faculative fibroblasts most closely resemble a fibroblast but this is not necessarily the cell of origin
- Ex. Benign fibrou histiocytoma AKA Dermatofibroma
- Common lesion of dermis and subcutis
- Usually mid life, simply excised
- Usually do not recur
- Bland fibrohistiocytic cells in a storiform pattern
- Benign
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Term
Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans |
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Definition
- Infiltrative Dermal Neoplasm
- Now regarded as a well differentiated primary fibrosarcoma of the skin
- Slow growing, locally agressive
- Can Recurr
- Rarely metastasize
- Most frequently on trunk, protrude above skin surface, firm
- Storiform growth pattern
- Uncertain potential
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Term
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Definition
- Indicative of a clinically agressive lesion
- 30-50% recur and metastasize
- Needs adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy
- Deep and retroperotoneal locations: poor outcome
- Large lesions, deceptively circumscribed
- May resemble fibromatosis
- Neoplastic cell is now recognized to be phenotypically a fibroblast
- Not considered to be a cell of origin
- Storiform or pleomorphic pattern
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Term
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Definition
- Most common-benign muscle tumor (leiomyoma) in uterus, GI tract and skin
- Skeletal muscle tumors (not proliferations or nodular myositis), usually malignnt (rhabdomyosarcoma), benign tumor (rhabdomyoma) in heart
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Term
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Definition
- Rhabdomyoblasts in three patterns
- Embryonal
- Pleomorphic- less common and controversial
- Alveolar
- Agressive
- Treated with surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation
- Most common childhood sarcoma
- Head, neck, GI are most common sites
- Not associated wtih normal skeletal muscles
- In extremities it is associated with skeletal muscles
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Term
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Definition
- Most common tumor of women (uterus)
- Arise in skin, nipples. scrotum, and labia
- May arise in deep soft tissue- not very common here
- May arise in arrector muscle
- Small (1-2 cm) tumor made up of spindle cells
- Aligned at right angles
- Little to no mitotic activity
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Term
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Definition
- Adult soft tissue sarcoma (10-20% of total)
- W>M
- Dermis, deep extremities and retroperitoneum
- Present as painless firm masses
- Malignany biologic potential
- Excised superifical dermal lesions: Good outcome
- Non-resectable deep lesions- kill host
- Invade locally and metastasize
- Fascicles of malignant spindle cells arranged at right angles
- Cigar shaped nuclei
- Pleomorphic Nuclei
- Many mitosis
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Term
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Definition
- Develop near large joints of extremities (65% in lower extremities) not from synovium
- Deep masses with biphasic tumor cells (epithelial-like and spindle), many are monomorphic
- Calcified concretions may be seen
- Can metastasize through blood and lymph vessels
- Most have a t(x;18) and fused genes (SYT-SSX)
- Limb-sparing therapy wtih 40% 5 year survival rate
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