Cases reported "Osteopetrosis"

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11/35. Autosomal malignant osteopetrosis. From diagnosis to therapy.

    osteopetrosis is a heterogeneous family of rare human genetic disorders due to markedly decreased bone resorption. It is one among disorders causing osteosclerosis of the trabecular bone and/or hyperostosis of the cortical bone. Four types of human osteopetrosis have been clearly defined, but patients with atypical symptoms are frequent, suggesting that there are additional forms. The most severe expression of this condition in its malignant form is inherited as an autosomal recessive disorder and it is usually fatal before school age. It presents with failure to thrive, severe hepatosplenomegaly, pancytopenia and nerve compression leading to blindness and deafness during infancy. The case of a 2-month-old female child with severe hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, nystagmus, pancytopenia, gengival hyperplasia, optic atrophy, absent evoked visual potential and increased bone density within the total skeleton, is reported. Diagnosis of autosomal recessive malignant osteopetrosis was established by transiliac bone biopsy. She underwent bone marrow transplantation, but died soon afterwards. This rare and mortal disorder of bone formation requires early diagnosis and immediate pharmacological treatment, consisting in administration of vitamin D, in order to enhance bone resorption and of prednisone to improve hematological indexes and, if possible, bone marrow transplantation in order to ameliorate quality of life and survival.
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12/35. Infantile osteopetrosis in four Thai infants.

    Four Thai infants, aged between 4 and 23 months, had progressive abdominal distension, pallor and delayed or regressed developmental milestones, with age at onset of 1 month, 3 months, 4 months and 1 month, respectively. Clinical findings consisted of growth and developmental retardation, anemia, frontal bossing, marked hepatosplenomegaly, and hearing and visual impairment. Laboratory findings revealed moderate anemia, leukocytosis and thrombocytopenia. The radiographic findings comprised generalized sclerosis of all bones, including the cranial base, and obliteration of the medullary canals and trabecular patterns. The first and second patients, who had swelling of the wrist joints and prominent costochondral junctions, had hypophosphatemia, elevated levels of serum alkaline phosphatase, and metaphyseal flaring on their radiographs, which was consistent with infantile osteopetrosis complicated by rickets. After Stoss therapy, there were biochemical and radiological responses suggesting vitamin d deficiency in the first patient, but not in the second. The third patient, who had hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia and normal levels of serum alkaline phosphatase, received vitamin D at 3000 units per day, without improvement. Despite frequent blood transfusions, all patients continued to deteriorate and were finally lost to follow-up. rickets should be identified and treated at the onset, because treatment of rickets leads to improvement in well-being and an adequate clinical response to bone marrow transplantation.
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13/35. osteopetrosis--a review and report of two cases.

    We present a brief review of the rare condition of osteopetrosis together with two case reports of this disease in the same family affecting the jaws. The first in a 41-year-old woman, and the second in her 39-year-old brother. Plain films and computed tomography showed marked sclerosis of the affected bones with obliteration of the medullary cavities and thickening of the cortices as well as multiple absent and unerupted teeth. In addition radiographs showed discrete mixed radiopaque/radiolucent areas consistent with the appearance of fibro-cemento-osseous dysplasia, but which may also represent part of the overall spectrum of bone changes in osteopetrosis.
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14/35. Familial malignant osteopetrosis in children: a case report.

    The clinical, radiological, pathological and laboratory findings of two brothers with autosomal recessive malignant osteopetrosis are presented. Our findings are similar to characteristics previously reported in the literature about patients with osteopetrosis. The 6-year-old male patient was pale and had petechiae on his arms and legs. He also had macrocephalia, splenomegaly, severe pancytopenia, genu valgus, hypocalcemia, amaurosis, cessation of physical development, generalized bone sclerosis and recurrent infections with a history of multiple incidences of acute otitis media. Generalized bone sclerosis and irregular sclerosis of the maxilla and mandible were seen on radiographs. The oral mucosa was apparently normal but permanent tooth eruption was delayed although there was early loss of deciduous teeth. The recommended treatment was blood transfusion and therapy with antibiotics when necessary; a bone marrow transplant was not possible due to lack of a compatible donor.
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15/35. Traumatic fracture in a healthy man: benign or pathologic?

    OBJECTIVE: To describe the challenge of determining the correct diagnosis in a healthy adult male patient with a recent femoral fracture and a history of multiple bone fractures. methods: We present clinical, radiologic, laboratory, and histopathologic details in a patient with a history of recurrent fractures associated with minimal trauma. Moreover, the various types of osteopetrosis are reviewed. RESULTS: A 34-year-old African American man was in his usual state of good health when he fell hard on concrete. Immediately after the fall, he was able to bear weight, although pain prompted him to seek medical care. Besides a personal history of multiple fractures, he had no other medical problems. He had never smoked, denied illicit drug use, and had no family history of bone disorders or recurrent fractures. Findings on physical examination were unremarkable. radiography disclosed an incomplete femoral fracture and osteosclerosis. Bone survey revealed diffuse, symmetric osteosclerosis of both the axial and the appendicular skeleton. The long bones showed areas of almost complete obliteration of the medullary canal, along with prominent hyperostosis. Additionally, a "bone-within-bone" appearance to the thickened endosteum was noted. A bone scan demonstrated numerous areas of symmetric radiotracer uptake. Laboratory analyses were unremarkable, including a complete blood cell count, electrolytes, serum protein electrophoresis, thyrotropin, and parathyroid hormone. Total alkaline phosphatase was mildly elevated at 162 U/L (normal range, 35 to 130). Seven needles were broken during attempts to perform a bone biopsy. Histologic examination showed normal bone marrow with "woven" bone and areas of primary spongiosa within mature osteoid. Autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type 2 was diagnosed on the basis of his clinical presentation and the radiologic and pathologic findings. CONCLUSION: The preliminary diagnosis for this patient's condition was Paget's disease, and determining the correct diagnosis of osteopetosis prevented the administration of inappropriate therapy. In addition, this case report reminds the clinician that genetic disease may manifest in adulthood.
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16/35. dacryocystorhinostomy in osteopetrosis.

    osteopetrosis is a rare congenital disorder of bone metabolism characterized by generalized sclerotic bone resulting from osteoclast dysfunction. There are several ocular manifestations, one of which is nasolacrimal duct obstruction from osteosclerosis of the nasolacrimal foramen. The surgeon must anticipate and prepare for the difficulties of working with marbleized, ultra-dense bone, alternating technique accordingly. In nasolacrimal duct obstruction, surgical management produces seemingly stable long-term results. However, if ossification recurs at the operative site, reoperation may become necessary for either optic nerve decompression or dacryocystorhinostomy.
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17/35. Autosomal dominant osteosclerosis.

    Two cases of a craniotubular hyperostosis are presented. The radiographic features closely resemble Van Buchem disease (hyperostosis corticalis generalisata; endosteal hyperostosis, recessive type), including symmetrical and bilateral diaphyseal cortical thickening of the long and short tubular bones as well as sclerosis and thickening of the calvaria, mandible, shoulder and pelvic girdles, and thoracic cage. Unlike Van Buchem disease, no periosteal excresences are observed, alkaline phosphatase is normal, no basal foramina encroachment of the skull is present, and the genetic pattern is dominant inheritance. These cases possibly represent a separate disorder rather than a variant of Van Buchem disease.
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18/35. Infantile osteopetrosis complicating neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis.

    An autopsy case of infantile osteopetrosis complicating neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis is reported. autopsy revealed generalized sclerosis and thickening of cortical and spongy bones, formation of mineralized cartilagenous tissues, and narrowing of the marrow cavities associated with decreased hematopoietic cell components. Around the thickened bone trabecles, osteoclasts lacked a ruffled border and clear zone along the cell membrane facing the bone matrix surface. The brain was markedly atrophic with neuronal cell loss and focal gliosis, and the remaining neuronal cells accumulated brown granular pigments, which were confirmed histochemically and electron-microscopically to be ceroid and lipofuscin. In the cerebral medulla, the development of myelin sheaths was extremely poor. Also, the occurrence of Lex type glycolipids and GM3 and the apparent absence of cerebroside and cerebroside sulfate were proved by biochemical analysis, suggesting that the brain was still in a stage of embryonic development or still in the process of differentiation. Except for one suggestive case, this is the first case of complicating neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis in infantile osteopetrosis.
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19/35. Autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type II with "malignant" presentation: further support for heterogeneity?

    The osteopetroses are a heterogeneous group of disorders characterised by generalised bony sclerosis. The autosomal dominant form usually has a "benign" prognosis, in contrast to the "malignant" course of the autosomal recessive variety. In this paper we describe a kindred in which the phenotypic spectrum varied from an asymptomatic condition in adults to a severely affected infant, presenting with anaemia, hepatosplenomegaly, hydrocephalus and blindness. The findings in this family are reported and discussed to elucidate further the possible genetic heterogeneity in autosomal dominant osteopetrosis.
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20/35. Benign osteopetrosis.

    A case of a 3 1/2-year-old female with benign osteopetrosis is presented. There was radiographic evidence of previous fetal sclerosis of bone yielding a "bone-within-a-bone" appearance, but on radiophosphate imaging this fetal sclerosis was not hyperactive and could not be differentiated from the normal diaphysis surrounding it.
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