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abnormality
Types
1)primary pathologic fracturemorecommoninyoungpatients primary malignant bone tumours.
2)Secondary pathologic fracturemorecommoninadultpatients osteoporosis, osteomalacia, paget's disease, osteitis, osteogenesis imperfecta, benign bone tumours and cysts, secondary malignant bone tumours and cancer, infection, inherited bone disorders,or a bone cyst.
- Hyperparathyroidism
- incidence of hip frx is about 10%; - in younger pts with good bone stock, consider ORIF; - in elderly pts consider primary THR; - note, however, when when hyperparathyroidism occurs as a consequence of renal failure, there will be a relatively high risk of infection (from blood born septicemia due to dialysis)
fracture that occurs as result of normal activities, such as a fall from standing height or less. There are three fracture sites said to be typical of fragility fractures: vertebral fractures, fractures of the neck of the femur, and Colles fracture of the wrist. fracture line-Pathological fractures present as a chalkstick fracture in long bones, and appear as a transverse fractures nearly 90 degrees to the long axis of the bone. In a pathological compression fracture of a spinal vertebra fractures will commonly appear to collapse the entire body of vertebra.
the surrounding bone appears abnormal-lyticlesions Underlying medical conditions-hyperparathyroidism-osteoporosis-
calcium,potasium,magnesium- - Labs: - serum lab studies will help rule out systemic conditions; - Sed Rate - CBC - Serum Calcium - Skeletal Survey: (helps rule out pending frx in axial skeleton, femurs, and humeri); - Bone Scan - may reveal other bone lesions which are not evident from radiographs; - note that some tumors such as multiple myeloma do not show increased uptake on bone scans; - Biopsy: - performed thru fine needle or open biopsy; - culture for Osteomyelitis:
management
Primarypathologicfractureneedaggressivetreatment-
radiotherapy-chemotherapy-andinternalfixation---Stabilization and prosthetic replacement in difficult fractures and bone tumors---- Skeletal sequelae of radiation therapy for malignant childhood tumors.---inferior Vena Cava Filters Prevent Pulmonary Emboli in Patients with Metastatic Pathologic Fractures of the Lower Extremity
In this patient with metastatic breast cancer, the cancer has spread to the bone.
Fragility Fractures Osteoporosis is the commonest cause of pathological fractures in the elderly. The fracture is managed as any other, however the following points must be considered. The patient is often elderly and must be mobilized as soon as possible. ORIF is usually necessary. Technically ORIF is difficult as screws and plates often pull loose due to the poor bone stock. Look for a cause of the osteoporosis and consider long term medical treatment with hormonal replacement, bisphosphonates or calcium supplements.
In children the cause is often benign. If there is evidence of a localized bone lesion it can be a fracture through a benign tumour, in contrast to the adult skeleton where the cause is often malignant. Common causes are the fractures through: 1) Simple bone cyst 2) Aneurysmal bone cyst 3) Non ossifying fibroma If more than bone is involved by the process the cause may be: 1) Osteomyelitis 2) Histiocytosis 3) Vascular neoplasms 4) Metastasis (neuroblastoma and Wilms's tumor).
Metabolic and systemic diseases. 1) Osteogenseis imperfecta. Suspect it if there is a history of many previous fractures with minor trauma. The skeleton is osteopaenic and there are usually other healed and healing fractures. The fractures may lead to bowing of the bones and other angulatory deformities. In Type 1 osteogenesis (dominant inheritance, -ask about a family history of brittle bones.) the sclera are blue. Treat eh fractures as you would any other fracture. If ORIF is needed, prefer intramedullary rods to plates and screws, which may break out of the soft bone. In severe cases with malalignment multiple osteotomies may be needed to straighten the bone. The segments are skewered buy an intramedullary rod such as the Bailey-Dubow rod a rod that telescopes longer as the child grows. Straightening the bowed limb will lessen the chance of future fractures. 2) Rickets This is caused by lack of Vitamin D. In South Africa, where there is plenty of sun primary rickets is rare, but renal causes are not rare. Pathologic fractures are treated as for any other fracture. The underlying metabolic derangement will also need attention.
Adult Pathological Fractures: In the adult a localized lesion will often mean a malignancy. The most common cause is a metastasis. 1) Myeloma Suspect Myeloma with any localized lytic bone lesion in a patient over 50yrs of age. In a vertebra there is a vertebra plana or wafer vertebra. In long bones the Myeloma or plasmacytoma will present as a lytic lesion. In myelomatosis a skull x ray may show punched out lytic lesions. Do an ESR in all lytic tumours in Myeloma it is often markedly raised, typically over 100 mm/hr. Serum electrophoresis will show an abnormal M peak. The protein is lost into the urine and can be identified by the Bence Jones test or by urine electrophoresis. 2) Metastatic tumour Malignnt tumours that commonly metastasize to bone are: Breast Prostate (sclerotic) Lung Thyroid ( lytic, expansile) Renal (lytic, expansile) Management Basically all pathological fractures through a malignant metastasis need internal fixation. Be wary if the clinical picture is that of a primary bone tumour. These can often be treated by chemotherapy and later a curative resection. ORIF will be contraindicated for a primary without metastases. For metastases to bone the rationale is to Get he patient mobile and out of the hospital The fracture will not unite if treated conservatively because: o The bone will need to be irradiated o Irradiated bones will not unite via secondary intention. Make sure the rest of the bone is structurally sound by getting x rays of the whole bone. Get a skeletal technetium scan to determine the spread of other metastases. Where the primary is unknown appropriate investigations as to this need be done: Thorough physical examination including breasts in a female, rectal for and prostate in a man. Special Investigations: o Chest X ray o ESR o Thyroid scan o Abdominal CT or SONAR Prophylactic fixation of a metastasis: A large metastasis ideally should have ORIF before it breaks. If a lesion is painful on weitht bearing, and is more than 50% of the cortex in diameter it qualifies for internal fixation. Mirels has published a scoring system for ORIF of metastases. His system awards points for pain, whether the lesion is lytic or blastic and whether it is in the high risk peritrochanteric region of the femur. Of a possible 12 points, as score of more than 8 qualifies the patient for prophylactic fixation.
Conclusion:
The treatment of the pathologic fracture is based on
the establishment of a diagnosis. Only after establishing the diagnosis with certainty can a proper treatment strategy be formulated