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Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso

BACKGROUND: Myositis ossificans progressiva (MOP) is a low prevalence hereditary connective tissue disease (1:2,000,000 habitants). It is characterized by heterotopic ossification with an uncertain behavior that has been exceptionally related to neoplasms. The objective was to know the coexistence o...

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Autores principales: Cruz-Escutia, Nydia Karen, Mendoza-Álvarez, Sergio Alberto, Hernández-Montez, Zenia Irais, Palafox-Vargas, Martha Leticia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10395904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35274918
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author Cruz-Escutia, Nydia Karen
Mendoza-Álvarez, Sergio Alberto
Hernández-Montez, Zenia Irais
Palafox-Vargas, Martha Leticia
author_facet Cruz-Escutia, Nydia Karen
Mendoza-Álvarez, Sergio Alberto
Hernández-Montez, Zenia Irais
Palafox-Vargas, Martha Leticia
author_sort Cruz-Escutia, Nydia Karen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Myositis ossificans progressiva (MOP) is a low prevalence hereditary connective tissue disease (1:2,000,000 habitants). It is characterized by heterotopic ossification with an uncertain behavior that has been exceptionally related to neoplasms. The objective was to know the coexistence of MOP with neoplasms of mesodermal origin, so that they can be considered in the diagnosis of other patients, as well as formulate hypotheses to clarify their association. CLINICAL CASE: 27-year-old female with right gluteal and ischitiobial muscle pain that increased with exercise, without remission with analgesics until limiting the mobility of both extremities. A bone series was requested where areas of heterogeneous radiolucency were evidenced in the region of, both, thighs and pelvis in an irregular manner, similar to bone density, which was compatible with the ultrasound and tomographic findings; we concluded that they were images of myositis ossificans of the hip. The patient reported gastric symptoms and an endoscopy was requested, which histopathologically reported diffuse gastric carcinoma with signet ring cells; cabinet images showed an ovarian tumor. CONCLUSION: MOP is a low prevalence disease, which is why its knowledge and suspicion are essential for the diagnosis. We found little literature that involves the three entities; therefore, their pathophysiology and understanding is limited. Regarding MOP, at this moment there is no curative treatment; however, an accurate diagnosis allows to start rehabilitation in a timely manner with an improvement in the quality of life.
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spelling pubmed-103959042023-08-04 Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso Cruz-Escutia, Nydia Karen Mendoza-Álvarez, Sergio Alberto Hernández-Montez, Zenia Irais Palafox-Vargas, Martha Leticia Rev Med Inst Mex Seguro Soc Casos Clínicos BACKGROUND: Myositis ossificans progressiva (MOP) is a low prevalence hereditary connective tissue disease (1:2,000,000 habitants). It is characterized by heterotopic ossification with an uncertain behavior that has been exceptionally related to neoplasms. The objective was to know the coexistence of MOP with neoplasms of mesodermal origin, so that they can be considered in the diagnosis of other patients, as well as formulate hypotheses to clarify their association. CLINICAL CASE: 27-year-old female with right gluteal and ischitiobial muscle pain that increased with exercise, without remission with analgesics until limiting the mobility of both extremities. A bone series was requested where areas of heterogeneous radiolucency were evidenced in the region of, both, thighs and pelvis in an irregular manner, similar to bone density, which was compatible with the ultrasound and tomographic findings; we concluded that they were images of myositis ossificans of the hip. The patient reported gastric symptoms and an endoscopy was requested, which histopathologically reported diffuse gastric carcinoma with signet ring cells; cabinet images showed an ovarian tumor. CONCLUSION: MOP is a low prevalence disease, which is why its knowledge and suspicion are essential for the diagnosis. We found little literature that involves the three entities; therefore, their pathophysiology and understanding is limited. Regarding MOP, at this moment there is no curative treatment; however, an accurate diagnosis allows to start rehabilitation in a timely manner with an improvement in the quality of life. Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC10395904/ /pubmed/35274918 Text en © 2022 Revista Medica del Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Esta obra está bajo una Licencia Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivar 4.0 Internacional.
spellingShingle Casos Clínicos
Cruz-Escutia, Nydia Karen
Mendoza-Álvarez, Sergio Alberto
Hernández-Montez, Zenia Irais
Palafox-Vargas, Martha Leticia
Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
title Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
title_full Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
title_fullStr Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
title_full_unstemmed Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
title_short Miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
title_sort miositis osificante progresiva: reporte de un caso
topic Casos Clínicos
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10395904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35274918
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