Edema and Related Medical Conditions

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Friday, March 14, 2008

Histopathological perspective on bone marrow edema, reactive bone change and haemorrhage.

Histopathological perspective on bone marrow oedema, reactive bone change and haemorrhage.

Eur J Radiol. 2008 Mar 11

Thiryayi WA, Thiryayi SA, Freemont AJ.
Department of Histopathology, Manchester Royal Infirmary, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9WL, United Kingdom.


This article presents a systematic review of the current biomedical literature surrounding the aetiopathogenesis and histopathological features of bone marrow oedema, reactive bone change and haemorrhage. Bone marrow oedema is generally demonstrated as a non-specific finding on magnetic resonance imaging in association with infections, tumours and avascular necrosis. When it occurs in isolation as a primary event not triggered by any obvious bony pathology in the clinical setting of debilitating joint pain, it constitutes the "bone marrow oedema syndrome". Although the latter diagnosis is based on magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, showing the lesion as areas of signal hyperintensity within the marrow, recent radiology-histology correlational studies have shown variably interstitial marrow oedema, necrosis, fibrosis and trabecular bone abnormalities. In light of these facts, the use of the term bone marrow oedema syndrome in a radiological context might be considered questionable, but histopathological techniques are not sensitive in detecting increased extracellular fluid. Reactive bone changes may be focal or diffuse and usually amount to increased bone formation. Bone marrow haemorrhage, due to trauma, results in bone bruising, a condition in which the size of the bruise and associated osteochondral injury determines the outcome, although the natural history of these lesions is still being researched.


PMID: 18337044 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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