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Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

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Nội dung chi tiết: Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2 AssessmentINTRODUCTIONAlthough loose bodies within a joint were first described by Paget,1 Kõnig later suggested three methods by which loose bodies

could be created: (1) direct trauma with acute fracture, (2) minimal trauma that develops into osteonecrosis and subsequent fragmentation, or (3) no t Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

rauma with spontaneous fragmentation. The latter variety he coined osteochondritis dissecans (OCD).2,3 Although it should be pointed out that the exac

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

t pathophysiology remains unknown, it is agreed that OCD is likely an acquired lesion of subchondral bone.Beyond this characterization, it is less cle

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2ion unrelated to an acute osteochondral fracture of normal cartilage (Fig. 21.1).4’5 This understanding of the end point of the disease process has le

d to many etiologies of OCD being postulated (particularly concerning the knee) including trauma,6,7 inflammation,2,8 genetics,9 vascular abnormalitie Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

s,10’11 and constitutional factors.12 However, the etiology remains unknown, even though our veterinary medicine colleagues have made some leaps in un

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

derstanding over recent years.13,14Historically, there has been a distinction between juvenile-onset OCD and adult-onset OCD. Many surgeons have sugge

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2ographic healing or merely resolution of pain.4'5’9’11’12*15 Despite the lack of an open physis at the time of diagnosis in an adult OCD, however, man

y authors suggest that the only true difference between juvenile- and adult-onset OCD is purely a reflection of patient age at the time of diagnosis.A Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

recent definition of human OCD lesions, proposed by the Research in Osteochondritis of the Knee (ROCK) study group, highlights the fact that these ar

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

c (I) focal, (2) idiopathic, (3) involve subchondral bone, and (4) risk instability and disruption of articular cartilage with potential long-term con

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2LOGYThere are only three true epidemiology papers regarding knee OCD.10'17’18 The first was performed by Marsden and Wiernik18 in a review of 18,405 r

adiographs at a military hospital. They found an incidence of symptomatic OCD of 2.3% of the radiographs and an overall incidence (including incidenta Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

l discovery) of 4% OCD in their cohort.A classic study by Linden10 in 1977 from Malmo, Sweden demonstrated an incidence of 29 per 100,000 boys and 19

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

per 100,000 girls. More importantly, after he reviewed radiographs and obtained follow-up with many of these patients 33 years later, he discovered th

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2ritis to be 0% at the start of life, this was unchanged at age 40 years with an OCD; but the risk increased to 70% at age 48 years and continued to in

crease to 95% at 70 years of age. However, in those initially discovered with juvenile-onset OCD, he could not directly correlate any pathology such a Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

s gonarthritis with their OCD directly.The only other study was published in 2014 and included a review of just over1 million children aged 2 to 19 ye

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

ars within a closed health system.* 1 These authors found 192 children with 206 OCD lesions of the knee. The majority (64%) of the lesions involved th

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2varied by ethnicity: non-Hispanic white was 10.3 per 100,000 overall (17.3 and 3.0 per 100,000 for boys and girls, respectively), non-Hispanic black w

as 10.3 per 100,000 overall (17.3 and 3.0 per 100,000 for boys and girls, respectively), Hispanic was 8.6 per 100.000 overall (14.3 and 2.8 per 100.00 Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

0 for boys and girls, respectively), and Asian was 4.7 per 100,000 overall (9.1 and 0.0 per 100,000 for boys and girls, respectively). These authors p

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

erformed multivariable logistic regression analysis that revealed a 3.3-fold increased risk of OCD of the knee in children aged 12 to 19 years compare

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2may occur in both knees. In the literature, there is a relatively wide range of bilaterality noted with about a 3% to 30% chance of discovering it in

both knees by x-ray.5 * * *’18-23ETIOLOGYNo definitive etiology has yet been determined for the origin of knee OCD.There are, of course, many hypothes Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

es that have been presented and testedprimarily via ex vivo histology. The potential etiologies include inflammation,spontaneous osteonecrosis and vas

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

cular deficiency, genetic predisposition, andrepetitive trauma. Each of these will be discussed.As suggested by the name "osteochondritis,” the first

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2upported this etiology ’24;instead, these works appear to highlight findings of necrosis within the OCDlesions rather (han inflammation.Based on their

histology findings, Green and Banks12 * * * * * *’19 * * proposed thatischemia was the primary etiology, and Milgram,22 identifying revascularization Ebook Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery: Part 2

SECTION3Osteochondritis DissecansCHAPTEREric w. Edmonds Henry G. Chambers21Osteochondritis Dissecans: Overview,Epidemiology, Etiology,Classification,

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