Bones Developmental - Pathology
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Generalised
Chondrodysplasia
Osteopetrosis
Lysosomal Storage Disease
Osteogenesis Imperfecta
Congenital hyperostosis of pigs
- Rare, genetic
- Diaphysial dysplasia
- Excessive periosteal intramembranous bone, particularly in long bones
- Grossly:
- Greatly thickened long bones
- Tense, shiny skin, closely adherent to tissues below
- Born dead or die soon after birth
Retention of elongated primary trabeculae
- Happens due to impaired osteoclastic activity
- Primary trabeculae do not transform into secondary and tertiary
- Continue to elongate
- Form a dense band beneath growth plate - growth retardation lattice
- Dense spikules apparent on radiographs
- Can be caused by distemper virus, bovine viral diarrhoea virus
Localised
- Hemimelia - abscence of one of limb bones
- Syndactylia - fusion of toes
- Polydactylia - increased number of digits
- Ectrodactylia - cleft in paw extending to metacarpus of dogs and cats
Cervical Vertebral Stenotic Myelopathy (Wobblers)
- Equine disease
- Narrowing of the vertebral canal due to malalignment or maldevelopment of the vertebrae
- Fast growing male TBs ranging from 8 months to 4 years
- Hind limb ataxia due to cord compression
Angular limb deformity
- Lateral deviation of distal portion of limb (valgus)
- Medial deviation of distal portion of limb (varus) - more rare
- Most common in foals
- Carpal joint
- Tarsal joint
- Fetlock joint
- Congenital or acquired
- Due to:
- Malpositioning in utero
- Excessive joint laxity
- Hypothyroidism
- Trauma
- Overnutrition
- Defective endochondral ossification
- Poor conformation
- Disruption of blood supply to one side of bone
- Secondary to physitis in horses
- Usually resolves spontaneously in one to two weeks of life
- More severe cases exceding compensatory capabilities will persisist
- Cartilage development is affected
Fibrous dysplasia
Physitis
- In horses
- Often associated with angular limb deformity
- Also called epiphysitis and physeal dysplasia
- Problem of endochondral ossification
- Two age groups
- Weanlings
- Yearlings in early training and two-year-olds
- May cause contracted tendons and flexural deformities
- Factors probably involved in its development:
- Genetically fast growth rate
- Large quantities of imbalanced, high energy feed
- Imbalanced weight-bearing on joints
- Excessive activity
- Growth spurts
- Histologically: (appearance similar to angular limb deformity)
- Lateral aspect of radius
- Thickened metaphyseal part of physeal cartilage
- -> Delay or disturbance of endochondral ossification
- Compression
- Central part
- No obvious deformity
- Medial aspect
- Tension
- -> Transverse fractures and repair
- Laxity of periarticular attachements in young foals allows angular limb deformity; not occuring in older foals and young horses
- (Sustained trauma produces similar lesions)
- Lateral aspect of radius
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