Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, 40136 Bologna, Italy.
Department of Rare Skeletal Disorders, IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, 40136 Bologna, Italy.
Genes (Basel). 2022 Oct 28;13(11):1965. doi: 10.3390/genes13111965.
Osteopetrosis (from the Greek "osteo": bone; "petrosis": stone) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of rare diseases of the skeleton, sharing the same main characteristic of an abnormally increased bone density. Dense bones in radiological studies are considered the hallmark of these diseases, and the reason for the common term used: "Marble bone disease". Interestingly, a radiologist, Dr. Albers-Schonberg, described this disease for the first time in Germany in 1904. Indeed, radiology has a key role in the clinical diagnosis of osteopetrosis and is fundamental in assessing the disease severity and complications, as well as in follow-up controls and the evaluation of the response to treatment. Osteopetrosis includes a broad spectrum of genetic mutations with very different clinical symptoms, age onset, and prognosis (from mild to severe). This diversity translates into different imaging patterns related to specific mutations, and different disease severity. The main recognized types of osteopetrosis are the infantile malignant forms with autosomal recessive transmission (ARO-including the rarer X-linked recessive form); the intermediate autosomal recessive form (IAO); and the autosomal dominant ones ADO, type I, and type II, the latter being called 'Albers-Schonberg' disease. Imaging features may change among those distinct types with different patterns, severities, skeletal segment involvement, and speeds of progression. There are several classical and well-recognized radiological features related to osteopetrosis: increased bone density (all types with different degrees of severity assuming a 'Marble Bone Appearance' especially in the ARO type), different metaphyseal alterations/enlargement including the so-called 'Erlenmeyer flask deformity' (particularly of femoral bones, more frequent in ADO type 2, and less frequent in ARO and IAO), 'bone in bone' appearance (more frequent in ADO type 2, less frequent in ARO and IAO), and 'rugger-jersey spine' appearance (typical of ADO type 2). After conducting an overview of the epidemiological and clinical characteristic of the disease, this review article aims at summarizing the main radiological features found in different forms of osteopetrosis together with their inheritance pattern.
(源自希腊语“osteo”:骨;“petrosis”:石)是一组临床和遗传上异质性的罕见骨骼疾病,具有相同的主要特征,即骨密度异常增加。在影像学研究中,致密的骨骼被认为是这些疾病的标志,这也是共同使用的术语的原因:“大理石骨病”。有趣的是,一位放射科医生 Albers-Schonberg 博士于 1904 年在德国首次描述了这种疾病。事实上,放射学在osteopetrosis 的临床诊断中起着关键作用,对于评估疾病严重程度和并发症、随访控制以及评估治疗反应至关重要。Osteopetrosis 包括广泛的基因突变,具有非常不同的临床症状、发病年龄和预后(从轻度到重度)。这种多样性转化为与特定突变相关的不同成像模式和不同的疾病严重程度。主要的公认的osteopetrosis 类型包括常染色体隐性遗传的婴儿恶性形式(ARO-包括更罕见的 X 连锁隐性形式);中间常染色体隐性形式(IAO);和常染色体显性形式 ADO,I 型和 II 型,后者称为“Albers-Schonberg”病。在那些不同类型之间,成像特征可能会发生变化,具有不同的模式、严重程度、骨骼节段受累和进展速度。有几种经典的、公认的与 osteopetrosis 相关的放射学特征:骨密度增加(所有类型均有不同程度的严重程度,表现为“大理石骨外观”,尤其是 ARO 类型);不同的干骺端改变/增大,包括所谓的“大口瓶畸形”(特别是股骨,ADO 2 型更常见,ARO 和 IAO 型较少见);“骨内骨”外观(ADO 2 型更常见,ARO 和 IAO 型较少见);和“rugger-jersey 脊柱”外观(ADO 2 型典型)。在对该疾病的流行病学和临床特征进行概述后,本文旨在总结不同形式的 osteopetrosis 中发现的主要放射学特征及其遗传模式。