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Osteochondritis Dissecans: Etiology, Pathology, and Imaging with a Special Focus on the Knee Joint. | LitMetric

Osteochondritis Dissecans: Etiology, Pathology, and Imaging with a Special Focus on the Knee Joint.

Cartilage

3 Radiology, Interventional Radiology, Marienkrankenhaus Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The article reviews the causes, development, diagnosis, and treatment options for knee osteochondritis dissecans (OCD), noting it mainly affects children and adolescents with open growth plates and adults with closed ones.
  • The exact cause of OCD is unclear, but it involves aseptic necrosis of the subchondral bone, with a significant role of mechanical factors, while nonspecific clinical symptoms make imaging techniques crucial for diagnosis.
  • Treatment often includes rest and immobilization, with spontaneous healing expected for stable lesions, while surgical interventions vary based on cartilage condition, highlighting that procedures aimed at reconstructing both bone and cartilage yield better long-term outcomes.

Article Abstract

This article is a review of the current understanding of the etiology, pathogenesis, and how to diagnose and treat knee osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) followed by an analysis of and outcomes of the treatments available. OCD is seen in children and adolescents with open growth plates (juvenile OCD) and adults with closed growth plates (adult OCD). The etiology of OCD lesions remains unclear and is characterized by an aseptic necrosis in the subchondral bone area. Mechanical factors seem to play an important role. Clinical symptoms are unspecific. Thus, imaging techniques are most important. Regarding treatment, a tremendous number of publications exist. Spontaneous healing is expected unless there is an unstable fragment, and treatment involves rest and different degrees of immobilization until healing. Patients with open physes and low-grade lesions have good results with conservative therapy. When surgery is necessary, the procedure depends on the stage and on the state of the cartilage. With intact cartilage, retrograde procedures are favorable. When the cartilage is damaged, several techniques can be used. While techniques such as drilling and microfracturing produce reparative cartilage, other techniques reconstruct the defect with additional osteochondral grafts or cell-based procedures such as chondrocyte transplantation. There is a tendency toward better results when using procedures that reconstruct the bone and the cartilage and there is also a trend toward better long-term results when comorbidities are treated. Severe grades of osteoarthrosis are rare.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6139592PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1947603517715736DOI Listing

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