AbstractsMedical & Health Science

Osteonecrosis. Prognosis and Prevention of the Consequences of Osteonecrosis

by Jan Juréus




Institution: University of Lund
Department:
Year: 2014
Keywords: Medicine and Health Sciences
Record ID: 1346112
Full text PDF: http://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4690537


http://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4690537/file/4690592.pdf


Abstract

Abstract Background Osteonecrosis (ON) is defined by the in situ death of bone cells, osteocytes, hematopoietic and fatty marrow precursor cells. Events and risk factors known to be associated with ON are femoral neck fracture, hip dislocation, slipped capital femoral epiphysis in children, humeral head fracture and insufficiency fractures in load-bearing joints. The etiology of non-traumatic ON is less well understood. Factors associated with non-traumatic ON are corticoid steroid use, alcohol abuse and systemic lupus erythematosus. If factors related to the osteonecrotic lesion cannot be found, the lesion is defined as “spontaneous”. Regardless of the cause, vascular compromise is however the final pathway which leads to cellular death. Ingrowing blood vessels invade the necrotic bone and remodeling starts with simultaneous coupled bone resorption and formation. The changes resemble what happens in fracture healing and bone graft incorporation. The mechanical strength of the remodeling bone might temporarily be decreased due to either the resorption of the necrotic bone or a fatigue stress fracture in necrotic bone not yet revitalized. If the necrosis occurs in subchondral load bearing bone, partial joint collapse and secondary osteoarthritis may be the final consequence. Methods In paper 1, a 1-4 year follow-up study was performed of 17 patients with spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee (SPONK), who were treated with bisphosphonates and evaluated regarding secondary degenerative changes. These 17 treated patients were compared to a previously untreated control group (paper 2). In paper 2, an almost life long follow-up of 40 SPONK patients was conducted. The patients were matched with the Swedish Knee Arhtroplasty Register (SKAR) to evaluate the frequency of major knee surgery. In paper 3 the risk of ON and secondary degenerative changes after cervical hip fracture was studied in children and younger adults. Radiographs performed at follow-up minimum of 12 months after the fracture were correlated with the scintigraphic examinations evaluating the remaining femoral head circulation made directly post-operatively. In paper 4, the remodeling of non-vascularized bone grafts under high load was studied in a specially designed bone chamber in rats. Bone chambers with bone grafts were implanted in the proximal tibial bone. Half of the rats were administered bisphosphonates and the other half were not. The lengths of the grafts, before surgery and after harvest, were compared to assess whether bisphosphonates decreased the compression of the graft during remodeling. Results Paper 1. The 17 patients who were treated with bisphosphonate had a significantly (p<0,05) lower risk of developing secondary degenerative changes at the follow-up, compared to the untreated control group. Paper 2. 75% of the patients developed secondary degenerative changes in this almost life long follow-up study with SPONK patients. 17/40 patients have had major knee surgery with…