Transient Osteoporosis
Background: Transient osteoporosis is an uncommon and self-limited clinical syndrome characterized by acute joint pain with evidence of bone marrow edema on MRI. It predominantly affects healthy middle-aged men or women in the third trimester of pregnancy. The hips, knee, foot and ankle are affected...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the Endocrine Society 2021-05, Vol.5 (Supplement_1), p.A227-A228 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Transient osteoporosis is an uncommon and self-limited clinical syndrome characterized by acute joint pain with evidence of bone marrow edema on MRI. It predominantly affects healthy middle-aged men or women in the third trimester of pregnancy. The hips, knee, foot and ankle are affected in decreasing order of frequency. Pathophysiology is unknown but multiple etiologies such as ischemia, neurogenic compression or impaired venous return have been proposed. Classically, it is unilateral and bilateral in only 20%-40% of cases. It has been reported to periodically involve different joints over time with one report showing the progression to regional migratory osteoporosis in at least 20% of patients. There are no specific biomarkers to aid with diagnosis, MRI shows diffuse bone marrow edema sometimes associated with joint effusion with infrequent subchondral microfractures. Other etiologies to consider for bone marrow edema include osteomyelitis, avascular necrosis, trauma, tumors and inflammatory arthropathy. Transient osteoporosis can be self- limiting however, bisphosphonate use has been associated with shortened recovery time. In our patient given lack of access to his previous records to review and ascertain his previous diagnosis, his diagnosis of record was transient osteoporosis rather than regional migratory osteoporosis. Clinical Case: A 47 yo male presented to clinic with complaint of left ankle pain. Pain initially noted when he tripped and fell one year ago. Initial x-rays did not reveal any fractures. He was unable to weight bear due to pain although he had full range of motion at the ankle with a normal neurological and vascular exam of the foot. Due to persistence of pain, an MRI was done which showed cutaneous edema around the medial and lateral aspects of the ankle, trace tibiotalar joint effusion, marrow edema in the distal tibia and navicular with no acute fracture or definite evidence of avascular necrosis. On further questioning he reported a previous history of hip pain at age 32 and 41 with no preceding trauma. X-rays were negative for fracture and MRI showed marrow edema. Symptoms resolved after a few weeks with possible treatment with Alendronate. With the current presentation biochemical work up including Vitamin D, PTH, 24-hour urine calcium, electrolytes, phosphorus and alkaline phosphatase was unremarkable. Given the marrow edema reported on MRI, absence of fracture, osteochondral lesion or recent trauma transient ost |
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ISSN: | 2472-1972 2472-1972 |
DOI: | 10.1210/jendso/bvab048.462 |