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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A primary malignant bone disease can generally be suspected on the basis of x-ray findings and may be even highly probable if several signs of malignancy are seen on one and the same film. Such changes include bone lesions larger than 6 cm on the first film with blurred outlines, showing patterns of destruction resembling moth-eaten textiles, the covering
periosteum
revealing spicula or Codman's triangles. Rapidly growing tumours can break cortex components from the continuous layer and shift them outwards. Roentgenological case controls are useless and must be replaced by a sample excision, since x-ray malignancy signs have no absolute value as decisive criteria in view of the fact that they are seen, inter alia, also in osteomyelitis,
myositis
ossificans and callus formations.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of osteosarcoma (author's transl)]. 28 51
The authors have previously shown that passive daily mobilization of the rabbit hind limb immobilized with the knee in extension leads to necrosis of the deep thigh muscles and
myositis
ossificans-like periosteal bone formation. In this study the effect of immobilization alone on the rabbit hind limb muscles was examined similarly to that of immobilized limbs. Serum creatine kinase activities increased significantly and intravenously administered Evans blue albumin showed increased vascular permeability in the deep vastus intermedius muscle even on day 1. Necrotic fibers were clearly present in the deep part of the vastus intermedius muscle on day 5 in light and electron microscopy and in enzyme histochemistry. Fibrosis and atrophy were found later. The superficial portion of the vastus intermedius and the deep contralateral nonimmobilized vastus intermedius showed degenerative changes. Bone formation was not noted. The conclusion was that the deep vastus intermedius muscle composed almost exclusively of type I fibers is exceptionally prone to damage when immobilized in a shortened position. Contact of the necrotic muscle with the underlying
periosteum
is not alone sufficient to induce heterotopic ossification. The additional trauma caused by daily mobilization is needed for the
myositis
ossificans-like bone formation.
...
PMID:Severe degeneration of rabbit vastus intermedius muscle immobilized in shortened position. 235 53
The development of ectopic ossification in experimental
myositis
ossificans of the rabbit thigh was studied. The right hind limb of 25 rabbits was immobilized with the knee in extension. Once a day the limb was passively mobilized for 2-3 minutes. The animals were killed 3, 5, 7, 14, 21, 28 and 35 days after the beginning of the experiment. Specimens for light and electron microscopy were obtained from both hind limbs. Extensive necrosis and fibrosis were observed in the right vastus intermedius muscle during the first week. Proliferation of chondrocytes and osteoblasts with newly formed woven bone and cartilage formation were found in the
periosteum
within 7 and 14 days after the beginning of the experiment. Intensive enchondral ossification and hard calcified tissue were observed later. It was evident that bone formation in this experimental model started in the
periosteum
after necrosis of the adjacent skeletal muscle. Therefore the temporal and spatial relationship of traumatic changes in the
periosteum
and muscle seems important for the development of
myositis
ossificans.
...
PMID:Bone formation in experimental myositis ossificans. Light and electron microscopy study. 297 37
Metaplastic bone is an uncommon finding in cases of fasciitis. It has been reported only in occasional cases in series of patients with nodular fasciitis, parosteal fasciitis, proliferative fasciitis, and proliferative
myositis
. Ossification is relatively common in cranial fasciitis of childhood, a form of fasciitis that may originate in cranial
periosteum
. We studied a patient with ossifying fasciitis that occurred along the adventitia of the femoral artery, at the site of an earlier angiographic study.
...
PMID:Ossifying fasciitis. 681 99
A review of the radiographs of 60 hemophilia patients showed nine (15%) with ectopic new bone formation. Three of these patients had multiple sites of involvement. The high frequency discovered in this series contrasts with the paucity of descriptions to be found in the literature. This process of
myositis
ossificans affects the lower half of the body and probably represents dysplastic metaplasia developing at the site of an intramuscular hematoma when remote from bone, as well as ossification of hemorrhagic lesions related to the
periosteum
. In conventional radiographs anatomic localization of bone foci is difficult, but use of computed tomography permits precise identification of the affected muscle. There is negligible disability associated with this condition.
...
PMID:Myositis ossificans in hemophilia. 733 12
Canine hepatozoonosis, caused by Hepatozoon americanum, is an emerging tick-borne disease of dogs in North America. In addition to the skeletal and cardiac
myositis
that are prominent features of the disease, there is disseminated periosteal bone proliferation in most dogs that manifest clinical disease. Each of six experimentally infected animals (four dogs and two coyotes) and seven of eight naturally infected dogs had gross or histopathologic osteoproliferative lesions. Experimental animals were 6-9 months of age when exposed. Naturally infected dogs were 8 months to 11 years old when subjected to necropsy. Lesions occurred primarily on the diaphysis of the more proximal long bones of the limbs; however, flat and irregular bones were frequently involved. Lesions involving metacarpals, metatarsals, and digits were infrequent. The earliest observed periosteal lesions were in an experimentally infected dog 32 days after exposure to sporulated oocysts of H. americanum. There were hypertrophy and hyperplasia of osteoprogenitor cells, and osteoblasts appeared in the cellular zone of the
periosteum
. Spicules of woven bone oriented perpendicularly to bone cortex followed. Later yet, periosteal new bone was remodeled and tended to become oriented parallel to the cortical bone. Horizontally oriented zones of remodeled, condensed bone sometimes occurred in multiple layers on the original cortex, forming "pseudocortices." The osseous lesions of American canine hepatozoonosis, with few variations, are remarkably similar to those of hypertrophic osteopathy in domestic dogs and other mammalian species, including humans.
...
PMID:Skeletal lesions of canine hepatozoonosis caused by Hepatozoon americanum. 1081 Sep 86
For patients that present with musculoskeletal symptoms, diagnostic procedures carried out by physicians and rheumatologists are primarily aimed at confirming or excluding the occurrence of primary rheumatic diseases. Another important trigger for musculoskeletal disease, however, is the presence of a tumour. Careful clinical investigation and knowledge of the gestalt of musculoskeletal syndromes related to respective tumour entities is of utmost importance for the diagnosis of paraneoplastic rheumatic diseases such as hypertrophic osteoarthropathy, paraneoplastic polyarthritis, RS3PE syndrome, palmar fasciitis and polyarthritis, cancer-associated
myositis
and tumour-induced osteomalacia. This places great responsibility on rheumatologists in diagnosing malignancies and referring the patient for effective treatment. The selective influence of tumours on musculoskeletal tissue is surprising and indicates that tumours alter tissues such as the
periosteum
, synovial membrane, subcutaneous connective tissue, fascia, muscles and bones by specific molecular processes. Some of the underlying mechanisms have been unravelled, providing valuable information on the physiologic and pathophysiologic roles of mediators such as vascular endothelial growth factor and fibroblast growth factor 23.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic syndromes in rheumatology. 2513 82
Bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation (BPOP, also known as Nora's lesion) is a rare, benign, locally aggressive condition defined as osteochondromatous exostosis arising from the bony cortex. BPOP presents predominantly in the 2nd and 3rd decades of life, and commonly arises from the
periosteum
of metacarpals and metatarses, though rare locations have been reported, including the long bones, the maxillae, the bones of calvaria, and the sesamoids. The case of an osteochondromatous lesion in an infant with an intra-abdominal mass arising from the iliac wing, an atypical location of benign solitary lesions, is reported. Benign solitary lesions are exceptional in this age group. The parents of the patient, who was born in term at 3600 grams, discovered a mass in the left groin and observed decreased movement in the lower left extremity. No history of trauma was reported. When the patient was 5 months of age, AP pelvic X-ray, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a bony mass displacing intra-abdominal organs anteromedially. Biopsy reported an osteocartilaginous lesion with calcified mature cartilaginous fragments surrounded by plasmacytoid, monotone, fibrinoid cells in myxoid background. Differential diagnosis included osteochondroma, osteochondromyxoma, BPOP, fibrocartilaginous mesenchymoma, chondromyxoid fibroma, periosteal chondroma, soft tissue chondroma,
myositis
ossificans, and juxtacortical chondroma. Biopsy of the resected specimen determined a diagnosis of BPOP. At 6-month postoperative follow-up, neither symptoms nor complaints related to the mass were present.
...
PMID:Congenital bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation in unusual location and age: a case report. 2685 60
We report a case of a 29-year-old man who had been a victim of a public road accident. Four weeks later, the patient developed an isolated right thigh mass located ventrally in the distal one-third of the thigh. The mass was painful and associated with fever and inflammatory syndrome. Plain radiographs showed a bilateral calcified thickening of soft tissues with well-defined bony margins. Ultrasound objectified diffuse calcifications of soft tissues.CT scan-confirmed the diagnosis of
myositis
ossificans circumscripta, showing a bilateral thickening of the vastus intermedius chief of the quadriceps dotted with calcifications, extending along the femur axis. These calcifications have well-defined bony margins separated from the
periosteum
by a lucent zone.
...
PMID:Traumatic myositis ossificans circumscripta (MOC). 2867 11
The authors report a case of
myositis
ossificans traumatica of the masseter muscles. A 21-year-old man developed masseter
myositis
after orthognathic surgery to treat facial asymmetry. The
myositis
may have been triggered by factors such as calcification of a hematoma,
periosteum
implantation after surgical trauma, and local soft tissue injury. An intraoral incision was made to excise the ectopic bone, resulting in resolution of the patient's symptoms including limited oral opening.
...
PMID:Circumscribed Myositis Ossificans of the Masseter Muscle. 3315 77
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