ANSWER: 1. Paget’s Disease of Bone (ribs low down on list – most common pelvis,femur,skull and tibia. Mark and Eric agree but not specifically seen)
**LJS - not sure about this. Fibula is least common bone involved in Pagets, and ribs also uncommon. Seems unlikely they want you to pick Pagets by distribution and then list 2 uncommon locations. I would choose fibrous dysplasia or mets (though long lesions not typical). Can have polyostotic FD without it being syndromic (which is ass/w lesions in half body)
Medullary Carcinoma
• Higher incidence in women carrying BRCA1 gene (13%)
• Usually 2 – 3 cm, but may be large fleshy tumours up to 5cm
• The prognosis is slightly better than that of other types ? all those lymphocytes fighting the cancer, or that this tumor is a distinct disease? Maybe both
• 5mm node negative with mets??? Give me a break, cant be true
Pagets
• Polyostotic (85%)
• pelvis (75%) > femur > skull > tibia > vertebra > clavicle > humerus > ribs
Polyostotic without Endocrine Dysfunction
• lesions may be confined to a single limb or single side of skeleton Langerhan’s Histiocytosis
• Any bone in skeletal system maybe involved
• most commonly skull (diploic space of parietal bone) (note epidermoid has sclerotic rim), ribs and femora
ANSWER:1. There is a insufficient, osteoid matrix formation with slowing of cartilage resorption (there is insufficient production of osteoid matrix by osteoblasts, Resorption of the cartilaginous matrix then fails or slows; as a consequence, there is cartilaginous overgrowth)
ANSWER:3. Chondrocytes proliferate forming clones
Early
• Chondrocyte proliferation
• increased matrix water
• decreased proteoglycans in cartilage matrix
• Fibrillation of cartilage + loss of superficial cartilage layers
• Cartilage surface granular & soft
Intermediate
• Nonspecific synovitis without pannus
• Eventually sloughing of full-thickness portions of cartilage with exposure of subchondral bone
• Friction results in bone eburnation
• Subchondral bone plate thickens & underlying cancellous bone becomes sclerotic
• Small fractures occur through subchondral bone plate
• Fragments of bone & cartilage form loose bodies within joint (loose bodies,joint mice)
Later
• Fractures through cartilage allow synovial fluid to be forced into subchondral regions forming fibrous walled subchondral cysts
• Cysts may also reflect rarefaction due to osteoclastic activity &/or osteocyte death
• Osteophytes develop at articular surface margins
o capped by fibrocartilage & hyaline cartilage that gradually ossifies
• Synovium becomes congested + fibrotic
ANSWER:1. They typically occur in regions of skin subjected to pressure (rise in regions of the skin that are subjected to pressure, including the ulnar aspect of the forearm, elbows, occiput, and lumbosacral area)
• Rheumatoid nodules
o are the most common cutaneous lesion.
o They occur in approximately 25% of patients, usually those with severe disease, and arise in regions of the skin that are subjected to pressure, including the ulnar aspect of the forearm, elbows, occiput, and lumbosacral area.
o Less commonly, they form in the lungs, spleen, pericardium, myocardium, heart valves, aorta, and other viscera.
o Rheumatoid nodules are firm, nontender, and round to oval and in the skin arise in the subcutaneous tissue.
o Microscopically, they have a central zone of fibrinoid necrosis surrounded by a prominent rim of epithelioid histiocytes and numerous lymphocytes and plasma cells
ANSWER:5. Whist there is a proliferation of osteoclasts, osteoblasts and bone resulting in cortical thickening, the overall lamellar pattern remains ordered in the absence of malignancy. (The newly formed bone is disordered and architecturally unsound)
• Sarcomatous Change in ~ 1% → lytic lesion often with cortical breakthrough o 50% osteosarcoma o 25% malignant fibrous histiocytoma o 15% remainder fibrosarcoma o 5% chondrosarcoma o 5% GCT o → suggested clinically by (1) change in type & severity of bone pain (2) enlarging mass (3) pathological fracture
ANSWER:5. It involves peripheral joints (e.g. knees, hips shoulders) in over 20% of patients. (Peripheral large joints - hips, shoulders, knees are involved in up to 1/3)
ANSWER:1. They are pathognomonic for gout
• Tophi
o are the pathognomonic hallmark of gout.
o They are formed by large aggregations of urate crystals surrounded by an intense inflammatory reaction of macrophages, lymphocytes, and large foreign body giant cells, which may have completely or partially engulfed masses of crystals
o Tophi may appear in the articular cartilage of joints and in the periarticular ligaments, tendons, and soft tissues, including the olecranon and patellar bursae, Achilles tendons, and ear lobes.
o Less frequently, they may appear in the kidneys, nasal cartilages, skin of the fingertips, palms, or soles as well as elsewhere.
o Superficial tophi can lead to large ulcerations of the overlying skin.
• Gouty nephropathy
o refers to the renal disorder associated with the deposition of monosodium urate crystals in the renal medullary interstitium, sometimes forming tophi, intratubular precipitations, or free uric acid crystals, and the production of uric acid renal stones.
o Secondary complications, such as pyelonephritis, may ensue, particularly when the urates induce some urinary obstruction.
• On average, it takes about 12 years between the initial acute attack and the development of chronic tophaceous arthritis
ANSWER:2. Afro-American (Ewings- Caucasions 96%)
Ewings Sarcoma vs Osteomyelitis :
• Duration of symptoms shorter (<2 weeks)
• May look identical
• M:F = 2:1
• Caucasians in 96%, blacks are rarely afflicted
• Of all bone sarcomas, Ewing sarcoma has the youngest average age at presentation as most patients are 10 to 15 years old
• approximately 80% are younger than 20 years.
• In approximately 85% of Ewing sarcomas and PNETs, there is a t(11;22)(q24;q12) translocation
• Location: femur (25%), pelvis-ilium (14%), tibia (11%), humerus (10%), fibula (8%), ribs (6%)
• long bones in 60%: flat bones in 40%
• The treatment of Ewing sarcoma includes chemotherapy and surgery with or without radiation. The advent of effective chemotherapy has dramatically improved the prognosis from a dismal 5% to 15% to a 75% 5-year survival; at least 50% are long-term cures.
POSTMENOPAUSAL OSTEOPEROSIS ( TYPE 1)
(DEXA)AGE-RELATED SENILE (TYPE 2)
ANSWER:1. chondroblastoma may give rise to chondrosarcoma (Although a significant number of conventional chondrosarcomas arise in association with a preexisting enchondroma, few develop within an osteochondroma, chondroblastoma, or fibrous dysplasia or in the setting of Paget disease)
**LJS - caution - more recent Robbins lists only enchondroma and osteochondroma as lesions in which secondary chondrosarcoma arises. Other sources (RP, stat dx) say can get rare malignant chondroblastoma, but doesn’t call them chrondrosarcoma
Other options incorrect, so presumably right answer at the time
Occurrence
5 year survival:
grade 1 = 90%
grade 2 = 80%
grade 3 = 40%
Morphological variants
ANSWER:2. Tibia, skull, spine
McCune-Albright Syndrome - polyostotic fibrous dysplasia
• skull, spine, and long bones
• Involvement of the skull can be particularly problematic, with lesions of the orbit resulting in visual loss and/or proptosis, and lesions of the ear resulting in deafness and vertigo.
• As with the cutaneous lesions, the bony lesions are not uniformly distributed and tend to be unilateral.
• Spindle cell fibrous tissue arranged in interlacing storiform (pinwheel) pattern
• Variable number of benign fibroblasts, scattered osteoclast-type giant cells, lipid-bearing foamy histiocytes (xanthoma cells), and haemosiderin
o Foam cells more common in older lesions
o Hemosiderin pigment in stromal cells
ANSER:1. unusually large multinucleated osteoclasts in the lytic phase (Aggressive bone resorption by giant, multinucleated osteoclasts)
ANSWER:2. Intramedullary chondroid matrix surrounding trabeculae
• Difficult to distinguish low grade chondrosarcomas from enchondromas
o Helpful diagnostic features of chondrosarcoma:
1. Plump multinucleated cartilage cells
2. Permeation through cancellous bone, replacing marrow and encasing trabeculae
3. Endosteal scalloping &/or focal cortical destruction
4. Cortical thickening
• To differentiate chondrosarcomas with foci of ossification from osteogenic sarcoma with chondroid differentiation:
o in chondrosarcomas, bone formation occurs within cartilage
o in osteosarcomas bone arises directly from anaplastic osteoblastic cells
ANSWER:2. Metastasises to regional LN’s, lung and bones
Synovial sarcoma
• <10% intra articular
• 10% of soft tissue sarcomas (4th) . -> PUS > liposarcoma > something > synovial sarcoma
• 20’s-40’s
• In the vicinity of the large joints of the extremities.
• 60-70% around lower extremities, especially knee
• The histological hallmark of synovial sarcomas is the biphasic morphology of the tumour cells (i.e. epithelial like and spindle cells)
• 5 year survival 25-60%
• Mets to regional LN’s lung and skeleton r
ANSWER:1. occurs in retroperitoneum and proximal limbs
ANSWER:2. spinal involvement (osteoblastoma involves the spine more frequently)
Osteoid Osteoma
• <2cm
• 75% < 25 yo
• 50% femur and tibia.
• Predilection for appendicular skeleton
• commonly in cortex, less frequently medulla
• painful. Relieved by aspirin
Osteoblastoma
• Involves spine more frequently
• Dull ache
• Not associated with marked bony reaction
• involves the spine more frequently and is usually larger than 2cm, and the pain does not respond to salicyclates
-ve birefringent crystal
ANSWER: kidney
ANSWER: RA
• Three main associated conditions (i.e. often present when CPPD present – do not cause CPPD):
• Other associations: o Prior joint damage i.e. OA o Hypomagnesaemia o Hypothyroidism o Ochronosis
• Calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposition disease (CPPD), also known as pseudogout and chondrocalcinosis
• It usually occurs in individuals over 50 years of age and becomes more common with increasing age, rising to a prevalence of 30% to 60% in those 85 years or older.
• The sexes and races are equally affected.
• CPPD is divided into sporadic (idiopathic), hereditary, and secondary types.
• In the hereditary variant, the crystals develop relatively early in life and are associated with severe osteoarthritis. One family with this disorder showed linkage of the disease with chromosome 8q.
• The secondary form is associated with various disorders, including
o previous joint damage
o hyperparathyroidism
o hemochromatosis
o hypomagnesemia
o hypothyroidism
o ochronosis
o diabetes
o gout.
May mimic other disorders eg RA
Previous answer:
1. knee is most common, not ankle
• knee commonest 80% followed in frequency by the hip, ankle, and calcaneocuboid joints
• They were previously considered reactive synovial proliferations (hence the designation synovitis); however, cytogenetic studies have demonstrated consistent chromosomal aberrations in these lesions indicating that they arise from a clonal proliferation of cells and are neoplastic
not found in RA.