Osteopetrosis
Osteopetrosis (Malignant)
Classification & external resources
| ICD-10 |
Q78.2 |
| ICD-9 |
756.52 |
| OMIM |
166600 259700 |
| DiseasesDB |
9377 |
| eMedicine |
med/1692 |
| MeSH |
D010022 |
Osteopetrosis also known as marble bone disease and Albers-Schonberg disease is an extremely rare inherited disorder whereby the bones harden, becoming denser, in contrast to the more prevalent osteomalacia, in which the bones soften.
It can cause osteosclerosis.[1]
Cause
Normally, bone growth is a balance between osteoblasts (cells that create bone tissue) and osteoclasts (cells that destroy bone tissue). Sufferers of osteopetrosis have a deficiency of osteoclasts, meaning too little bone is being resorbed, resulting in too much bone being created.
Symptoms
Despite this excess bone formation, people with osteopetrosis tend to have bones that are more brittle than normal. Mild osteopetrosis may cause no symptoms, and present no problems. However, serious forms can result in stunted growth, deformity, increased likelihood of fractures, and anaemia. It can also result in blindness, facial paralysis, and deafness, due to the increased pressure put on the nerves by the extra bone.
Variations
There are three major clinical forms:
Treatment
There is no cure, although curative therapy with bone marrow transplantion is being investigated in clinical trials[citation needed]. It is believed the healthy marrow will provide the sufferer with cells from which osteoclasts will develop.
Notable cases
See also
References
- ^ Lam DK, Sándor GK, Holmes HI, Carmichael RP, Clokie CM (2007). "Marble bone disease: a review of osteopetrosis and its oral health implications for dentists". J Can Dent Assoc 73 (9): 839–43. PMID 18028760.
- ^ Marin County artist Laurel Burch dead at 61 of rare bone disease. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
|
Congenital malformations and deformations of musculoskeletal system (Q65-Q79, 754-756) |
| Limbs |
hip: Dislocation of hip/Hip dysplasia
feet (Club foot, Flat feet, Pes cavus)
head, face, spine and chest: skull, face and jaw (Dolichocephaly, Plagiocephaly) - Scoliosis - chest (Pectus excavatum, Pectus carinatum)
Polydactyly/Syndactyly (Webbed toes)
reduction deficits (Ectrodactyly, Amelia, Phocomelia)
upper limb (Cleidocranial dysostosis, Madelung's deformity, Sprengel's deformity)
knee (Genu valgum, Genu varum)
Arthrogryposis |
| Skull and face bones |
Craniosynostosis (Scaphocephaly) - Trigonocephaly - Oxycephaly - Crouzon syndrome - Hypertelorism - Macrocephaly - Treacher Collins syndrome - Platybasia |
| Spine and bony thorax |
Klippel-Feil syndrome - Spondylolisthesis - Cervical rib - Bifid rib |
| Osteochondrodysplasia |
growth of tubular bones and spine: Achondrogenesis - Thanatophoric dysplasia - Short rib-polydactyly syndrome - Chondrodysplasia punctata (Rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata, Conradi-Hünermann syndrome), Achondroplasia (Hypochondroplasia, Osteosclerosis congenita) - Ellis-van Creveld syndrome - Spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita
Osteogenesis imperfecta - McCune-Albright syndrome - Osteopetrosis - Metaphyseal dysplasia - Hereditary multiple exostoses - Osteopoikilosis - Chondrodystrophy - Osteodystrophy |
| Other |
abdominal wall (Congenital diaphragmatic hernia, Omphalocele, Gastroschisis, Prune belly syndrome) - Ehlers-Danlos syndrome |
| See also non-congenital conditions (M, 710-739) |
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