Histopathology Bone--Osteoarthritis, subchondral cyst
Uploader Comments (WashingtonDeceit)
All Comments (16)
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Thanks for the explanation, it really helped.
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With osetoarthritis don't you normally see thickening of the subchondral bone or subchondral sclerosis? Because the cartilage of the joint has been eroded the subchondral bone is subjected to higher forces thus we see somewhat of a disorganised hypertrophy of the subchondral bone ... I say disorganised because it's not aligned like corticol bone it is more of a "scarring" of bone (even though bone regenerates - subchondral sclerosis = scarring of subchondral bone, so this bone is not as strong).
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You made me laugh at the beginning of this. :D
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this is a great contribution to medical education. To mine at least!
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Thanks. This is just great!!!
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Thanks - this is great.
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Very informative thank you.
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Thanks for the info I am 28 and just found out my right pain is a subchondral cyst. I have been researching and found there is nothing I can do. Could this have anything to do with me being 6'7 250lbs?
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ok, thanks for your reply
why do these things appear? the cyst i mean
bbbbbb222222 2 years ago
well, think of spicules of bone in which osteoclast activity exceeds oseoblast activity, i.e., increased resorption like osteoporosis, wouldn't cysts eventually form?
WashingtonDeceit 2 years ago
Is there such as thing as a psuedocyst in OA? Are these different than subchondral cysts? THANK YOU!
grilledcheesemmm 2 years ago
to the best of my knowledge
they aRE THE same
WashingtonDeceit 2 years ago
Can cysts on the bone develop independent of osteoarthritis, and if so, are they an indication of early arthritis?
Nilyentaraka 3 years ago
anytime bone resorption occurs locally or systemically, the chance of a "cyst" developing is always present, with thinning and resorption of spicules, even INDEPENDENT of classic "osteoarthritis"...great question
WashingtonDeceit 3 years ago