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Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics
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Osteolytic form of Paget's disease. Differential diagnosis and pathogenesis


Anderson-JT; Dehner-LP J-Bone-Joint-Surg-Am. 1976 Oct; 58(7): 994-1000 Of fourteen patients with Paget's disease for whom adequate roentgenograms and pathological material were available, six had lesions showing significant or predominant osteolysis. Based on a study of these six patients and a review of the literature, the following mechanisms were identified as causes of the so-called osteolytic type of the disease: (1) an "early" destructive Paget's lesion; (2) "advanced" Paget's disease with secondary degenerative changes; (3) "seeding" of an independent osteolytic lesion, particularly tumor in pre-existing Paget's disease; (4) sarcomatous transformation; and (5) immobilization after fracture. An osteolytic lesion in a patient without other bone disease may be due to Paget's disease, while an associated lytic lesion may be the result of a variety of conditions. Accurate pathological diagnosis is essential.



Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.