Cargando…

The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.

Skeletal tissues from children sustaining acute skeletal trauma were analyzed with detailed radiologic and histologic techniques to assess the failure patterns of the developing skeleton. In the physis- and epiphysis-specific fracture propagation varied, usually going through the portion of the hype...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ogden, J. A., Ganey, T., Light, T. R., Southwick, W. O.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1993
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2588861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8209558
_version_ 1782161008117153792
author Ogden, J. A.
Ganey, T.
Light, T. R.
Southwick, W. O.
author_facet Ogden, J. A.
Ganey, T.
Light, T. R.
Southwick, W. O.
author_sort Ogden, J. A.
collection PubMed
description Skeletal tissues from children sustaining acute skeletal trauma were analyzed with detailed radiologic and histologic techniques to assess the failure patterns of the developing skeleton. In the physis- and epiphysis-specific fracture propagation varied, usually going through the portion of the hypertrophic zone adjacent to the metaphysis. However, the physeal fracture in types 1 and 2 sometimes involved the germinal zone. There may also be microscopic propagation at oblique angles from the primary fracture plane, splitting cell columns apart longitudinally. The cartilage canals supplying the germinal zone appear to be "weak" areas into which the fracture may propagate, especially in infancy. Incomplete type 1 physeal fractures, which cannot be detected by routine radiography, may occur. Types 1, 2, and 4 physeal injuries may be comminuted. In type 3 injuries, discrete segments of physis that include the germinal zone may "adhere" to the metaphysis, separating the cells from their normal vascularity. In types 2 and 3, comminution may occur at the site of fracture redirection from the physis. Direct type 5 crushing of the physeal germinal zone does not occur, even in the presence of significant pressure-related changes within other areas of the epiphysis. Type 7 separation between cartilage and bone at any chondro-osseous epiphyseal interface may occur, but is similarly impossible to diagnose radiographically. In the metaphysis torus, fractures result from plastic deformation of the cortex, coupled with a partial microfracturing that may be difficult to visualize with clinical radiography. Some of the energy absorption may also be transmitted to the physis, causing metaphyseal hemorrhage adjacent to the growth plate and variable microscopic damage within the physis. In the diaphysis, the greenstick fracture is associated with longitudinal tensile failure through the developing osteons of the "intact" cortex. The inability of these failure patterns to "narrow" after the fracture force dissipates is the probable cause of retained bowing (plastic deformation). In both torus and greenstick fractures, the fractured bone ends show micro-splitting through the osteoid seams. In the diaphysis, metaphysis, and epiphyseal ossification center there may be areas of focal hemorrhage and microfracture that correlate with the reported MRI phenomenon of "bone bruising." Again, such injury cannot be diagnosed during routine radiography.
format Text
id pubmed-2588861
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1993
publisher Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25888612008-12-01 The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child. Ogden, J. A. Ganey, T. Light, T. R. Southwick, W. O. Yale J Biol Med Research Article Skeletal tissues from children sustaining acute skeletal trauma were analyzed with detailed radiologic and histologic techniques to assess the failure patterns of the developing skeleton. In the physis- and epiphysis-specific fracture propagation varied, usually going through the portion of the hypertrophic zone adjacent to the metaphysis. However, the physeal fracture in types 1 and 2 sometimes involved the germinal zone. There may also be microscopic propagation at oblique angles from the primary fracture plane, splitting cell columns apart longitudinally. The cartilage canals supplying the germinal zone appear to be "weak" areas into which the fracture may propagate, especially in infancy. Incomplete type 1 physeal fractures, which cannot be detected by routine radiography, may occur. Types 1, 2, and 4 physeal injuries may be comminuted. In type 3 injuries, discrete segments of physis that include the germinal zone may "adhere" to the metaphysis, separating the cells from their normal vascularity. In types 2 and 3, comminution may occur at the site of fracture redirection from the physis. Direct type 5 crushing of the physeal germinal zone does not occur, even in the presence of significant pressure-related changes within other areas of the epiphysis. Type 7 separation between cartilage and bone at any chondro-osseous epiphyseal interface may occur, but is similarly impossible to diagnose radiographically. In the metaphysis torus, fractures result from plastic deformation of the cortex, coupled with a partial microfracturing that may be difficult to visualize with clinical radiography. Some of the energy absorption may also be transmitted to the physis, causing metaphyseal hemorrhage adjacent to the growth plate and variable microscopic damage within the physis. In the diaphysis, the greenstick fracture is associated with longitudinal tensile failure through the developing osteons of the "intact" cortex. The inability of these failure patterns to "narrow" after the fracture force dissipates is the probable cause of retained bowing (plastic deformation). In both torus and greenstick fractures, the fractured bone ends show micro-splitting through the osteoid seams. In the diaphysis, metaphysis, and epiphyseal ossification center there may be areas of focal hemorrhage and microfracture that correlate with the reported MRI phenomenon of "bone bruising." Again, such injury cannot be diagnosed during routine radiography. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1993 /pmc/articles/PMC2588861/ /pubmed/8209558 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Ogden, J. A.
Ganey, T.
Light, T. R.
Southwick, W. O.
The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
title The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
title_full The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
title_fullStr The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
title_full_unstemmed The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
title_short The pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
title_sort pathology of acute chondro-osseous injury in the child.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2588861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8209558
work_keys_str_mv AT ogdenja thepathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT ganeyt thepathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT lighttr thepathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT southwickwo thepathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT ogdenja pathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT ganeyt pathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT lighttr pathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild
AT southwickwo pathologyofacutechondroosseousinjuryinthechild