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- AKA Marble bone disease
- AKA Albers-Schonberg disease
Definition
- Abnormally dense bones due disorder of osteoclasis
- Failure of osteoclastic resorption
- Dense bones
- Decreased marrow space
Classification
Tarda
- AD
- Adult form
- Relatively benign
- Common form is the Tarda form
Congenita
- AR
- Infantile form
- More severe
Infantile | autosomal recessive |
Intermediate | autosomal recessive |
Autosomal dominant | Albers Schonberg Disease |
Types of Osteopetrosis
Pathology
- Consists of generalised osteosclerosis, bone fragility & failure of remodelling
- Diminished bone resorption due to osteoclast defect
- May be due to immune thymic defect
- Bones exceedingly dense
- Marrow spaces & foraminae encroached upon by bone
- Bone fragile & brittle
- Tongues of cartilage persist at sites of enchondral bone formation
- May project into metaphysis
- Are calcified (cf. Rickets)
Clinical Features
Tarda
- May be unaffected
- Often chance diagnosis
- May see
- Mild anaemia
- Facial palsy
- Deafness due to Otosclerosis
- Fractures due to brittleness
- Fracture more common
- Heals slowly with ↑ non union (absence of vascular bone marrow)
- Prone to osteomyelitis after tooth extraction
- Beware IM nailing as no canal
- Drill out rather than Ream
- Use Delta nail
Congenita
- Presents in infancy
- Failure to thrive
- Marrow failure
- Pancytopaenia
- Easy bruising & bleeding
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Multiple fracture
- Cranial nerve palsies (optic & facial)
- Death from repeated haemorrhage or overwhelming infection
Investigations
Xray
- Increased density of all bones
- Widened cortices & narrow medullary cavity
- Bone within bone appearance
- “Picture-frame” bone
- Especially. spine
- Sclerotic end plates produce striped appearance (Rugger Jersey Spine)
- Flask-shaped metaphyses (Erlenmeyer Flask)
- Skull thickened & sclerotic
Treatment
- Treatment aimed at introduction of bone marrow with competent osteoclasts
- Need to do this before 12 months of age