Bone
Revision as of 02:17, 30 September 2010 by Michael (talk | contribs) (split-out non-tumour stuffs in bone tumours)
Bone is a scaffold. Tumours occasionally arise in them; these are dealt with in the bone tumours article.
Normal
- Normal bone has osteocytes.
- If the osteocytes are missing... the bone is dead.
- Osteoblasts - make bone.
- Osteoclasts - destroy bone.
Memory device: 'b' before 'c'.
Bone marrow
- Fat content (%) ~= age (in years)[1]
- e.g. 60 year old will have 60% fatty replacement.
- Should see three cell lines.
- The cell lines:[2]
- Erythroid (red cells),
- Myeloid (white blood cells),
- Megakaryocytic (platelets).
- The cell lines:[2]
Note: Lymphocytes are considered separately and typically spared in bone marrow failure.[3]
Identifying the lines:[4]
- Megakaryocytes:
- Big cells ~ 3x the size of a RBC.
- Normoblasts (RBC precursors):
- Hyperchromatic, i.e. blue, nucleus.
- Myeloid line:
- Granules.
- Reniform nucleus, i.e. kidney bean shaped nucleus.
Images:
Organization
- Mature hematopoeitic cells at the centre (distant from bone).
- Immature hematopoeitic cells adjacent to the bone.
Infectious
Osteomyelitis
General
- Hematogenous - often in children.
- Direct entry (skin defect) - adults with diabetes.
Microscopic
- PMNs.
Chronic osteomyelitis
- Plasma cells.
- May be sterile, i.e. no organisms.
Bone tumours
Main article: Bone tumours
This is a big topic. It is dealt with in a separate article.