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Heterotopic Ossification
HO


General considerations

  • Defined as the abnormal formation of true bone within extra-skeletal soft tissues
  • More common in males, especially following spinal cord injury, it is rare in young children
  • Formerly called myositis ossificans
    • That term has fallen out of favor because the condition is not always inflammatory and ossification occurs in soft tissues other than muscle
  • Strong association exists between HO and spinal cord or traumatic brain injury
    • About 20-30% of patients with neurologic deficits will develop HO, possibly higher with spinal cord injuries
  • It is also seen in burn patients, following surgery, and following blunt trauma such as horse riders may develop in the adductor muscles of the leg
  • There is an increased risk for HO in patients with Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis (DISH) and Paget’s Disease

Pathophysiology

  • Bone morphogenetic proteins may stimulate primitive stem cells in soft tissues to form osteoblasts under certain conditions
  • Following trauma, cartilage begins developing in soft tissues by 2nd week, with trabeculated bone appearing by 2-5 weeks

Clinical findings

  • May cause pain and a palpable mass
  • Contributes to further restricting range of motion
  • Can lead to breakdown of the skin in spinal cord patients
  • Post-surgical HO most commonly occurs at hip following arthroplasty which is also the most common site of HO in patients with brain or spinal cord injury
  • Shoulders and elbows follow in frequency in brain injury
  • Knees are uncommonly affected in brain injury but frequently affected in spinal cord injury

Imaging findings

  • Conventional radiography is the study of first choice
  • Nuclear bone scan is most sensitive for early detection
  • Bone can be detected on conventional radiographs as early as two weeks after injury, the ossification typically starting at the periphery as a cloud-like increase in density
    • Biopsy of the lesion could lead to a false-positive diagnosis of osteosarcoma unless the clinical findings are taken into account and time is allowed for the lesion to mature
  • CT may show a soft tissue mass early, followed by visualization of bone earlier than can be seen with conventional radiographs
  • MRI is typically not used
  • Ultrasound may show abnormalities in the muscle in advance of visible ossification
  • The standard for early HO detection is the triple-phase bone scan using Tc 99M MDP
    • Bone scans may be positive 2-6 weeks earlier than ossification is visible
      • Early in the course, only the blood pool images may be positive whereas abnormal uptake during the soft tissue phase is diagnostic later in the course of the disease

Treatment

  • Prophylactic treatment may include radiation therapy using an external beam, non-steroidal inflammatory agents and oral etidronate
  • Surgical resection, when performed, is usually done only after the lesion has matured, the progress of which can be monitored by bone scan
    • Recurrence is relatively common following resection

Heterotopic ossification. White arrows point to ossification (with trabeculae and cortex)
surrounding both hip joints in a young patient with a traumatic brain injury
several months earlier

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eMedicine   Heterotopic Ossification  Daniel S Moore, MD and Gina Cho, MD