Massive osteolysis (Gorham's disease) affecting the femur.

Autor: van der Linden-van der Zwaag H; Orthopaedic Department, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands. Enrike@vander-linden.nl, Onvlee GJ
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Acta orthopaedica Belgica [Acta Orthop Belg] 2006 Jun; Vol. 72 (3), pp. 261-8.
Abstrakt: Gorham's massive osteolysis is one of the five classical types of idiopathic osteolysis. The femoral localisation is rare. The diagnosis is based on anamnestic data (non-hereditary), on biochemical data (absence of nephropathy), on radiographical data (progressive monocentric osteolysis without periosteal reaction), and on histological data (intraosseous angiomatosis with either capillaries or lymph vessels, or both; eventually fibrosis). Nowadays, treatment mostly consists of amputation or arthroplasty, combined with radiotherapy. Spontaneous arrest of the disease occasionally occurs, but this is unpredictable. The possible role of gene-therapy in the regulation of osteoclastic activity has to be determined in the future. Review of the literature produced 22 cases of Gorham's massive osteolysis with a localisation at the femur massive osteolysis, including one personal case.
Databáze: MEDLINE